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'One of the greatest novels ever written' Philippe Sands Set
against the doomed splendour of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, The
Radetzky March tells the story of the celebrated Trotta family,
tracing their rise and fall over three generations. Theirs is a
sweeping history of heroism and duty, desire and compromise,
tragedy and heartbreak, a story that lasts until the darkening eve
of World War One, when all is set to fall apart. Rich, epic and
profoundly moving, The Radetzky March is Joseph Roth's timeless
masterpiece.
'One of the greatest European novelists of the century' Sunday
Times Andreas is an alcoholic and a vagrant who lives under a
bridge. Downtrodden, submerged at the bottom of society, he lives a
fortuitous life - dictated by happenstance and the whims of others
- until a run of exceptionally good luck lifts him, briefly, onto a
different plane of existence. First published after Roth's death in
1939, The Legend of the Holy Drinker is haunting and melancholic,
yet filled with empathy. A secular miracle-tale, it is an
unforgettable testament to Roth's lucidity and compassion.
In 1920, Joseph Roth, the most renowned German correspondent of his
age, arrived in Berlin, the capital of the Weimar Republic. He
produced a series of impressionistic and political writings that
influenced an entire generation of writers, including Thomas Mann
and the young Christopher Isherwood. Roth, like no other German
writer of his time, ventured beyond Berlin's official veneer to the
heart of the city, chronicling the lives of its forgotten
inhabitants - the Jewish immigrants, the criminals, the bathhouse
denizens, and the nameless dead who filled the morgues. Warning
early on of the threat posed by the Nazis, Roth evoked a landscape
of moral bankruptcy and debauched beauty, creating in the process
an unforgettable portrait of a city.
The Emperor's Tomb is a magically evocative, haunting elegy to the
vanished world of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and to the passing
of time and the loss of youth and friends. Prophetic and regretful,
intuitive and exact, Roth's acclaimed novel is the tale of one
man's struggle to come to terms with the uncongenial society of
post-First World War Vienna and the first intimations of Nazi
barbarities.
'Many years ago there lived in Zuchnow, in Russia, a man named
Mendel Signer. He was pious, God-fearing and ordinary, an entirely
commonplace Jew...' So Roth begins his novel about the loss of
faith and the experience of suffering. His modern Job goes through
his trials in the ghettos of Tsarist Russia and on the unforgiving
streets of New York. Mendel Singer loses his family, falls terribly
ill and is badly abused. He needs a miracle...
'A hugely significant and wonderfully haunting collection' William
Boyd In the 1920s and 1930s, Joseph Roth travelled extensively in
Europe, living in hotels and writing about the towns through which
he passed and the people he encountered. Collected in one volume,
his experiences in Italy, Germany, Russia, Albania and Ukraine form
a series of tender vignettes that capture life in the inter-war
years. Evocative, curious and sharply observed, these literary
postcards document a continent clinging to tradition while on the
brink of further upheaval.
This novella, one of the most haunting things that Joseph Roth ever
composed, was published in 1939, the year the author died. Like
Andreas, the hero of the story, Roth drank himself to death in
Paris, but this is not an autobiographical confession. Rather, it
is a secular miracle-tale, in which the vagrant Andreas, after
living under bridges, has a surprising run of good luck that
changes his circumstances profoundly. The novella is
extraordinarily compressed, dry-eyed and witty, despite its
melancholic subject matter.
Joseph Roth, the greatest European newspaper correspondent of his
age, left the splintering Weimar Republic for Paris in 1925 and, as
an Austrian Jew, was exiled there for the rest of his life.
Collected together here for the first time in English, these
exhilarating pieces evoke a world of suppleness, beauty and
promise. From the port town of Marseilles to the Riviera of Nice
and Monte Carlo, to the exotic hill country around Avignon, from
the socialist workers and cattlemen with whom Roth ate breakfast,
to prostitutes and Sunday bullfighters, The White Cities is not
only a swan song to a European order that could no longer hold but
also a beautifully crafted and revelatory work.
The legendary Austro-Hungarian novelist and essayist, Joseph Roth,
was born in Ukraine in 1894 and died tragically in Paris in 1939.
These letters span the breadth of Roth's life, from the schoolboy
to the veteran of 44, marked by war, poverty, alcoholism, the loss
of his wife through madness, and two decades of prolific work. It
is a deeply moving portrait of the life of the writer as an
outsider, in exile from a world he no longer recognized as his own.
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The Spider's Web (Paperback)
Joseph Roth; Translated by John Hoare
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R290
R231
Discovery Miles 2 310
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In The Spider's Web, his first novel, Roth paints a chillingly
realistic picture of the conspiracies of the radical right that
were to undermine the Weimar Republic and pave the way for Hitler
and National Socialism.
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