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THE PRIZE-WINNING SATIRICAL BESTSELLER - MORE THAN 500,000 COPIES
SOLD WORLDWIDE "I enjoyed The Capital so much . . . A major book"
New York Times "First-class satire" Guardian "A deliciously vicious
and timely satire" Financial Times "Mischievous yet profound"
Economist "Thoroughly entertaining" Spectator "[A] polyphonic EU
satire" The Times A "HOUSE OF CARDS" FOR THE EU The Capital is a
brilliantly entertaining satire, a crime story, a comedy of manners
. . . and a wild pig chase. This is the tale of a continent, a city
and its inhabitants as they navigate their way through the
confusing tangle of 21st-century life.
************************************* Brussels. A hive of tragic
heroes, manipulative losers, involuntary accomplices. No wonder the
European Commission is keen to improve its image. The fiftieth
anniversary of the European Commission approaches, and the
Directorate-General for Culture is tasked with organising an
appropriate celebration. When Fenia Xenopoulou's assistant comes up
with a plan to put Auschwitz at the very centre of the jubilee, she
is delighted. But she has neglected to take the other E.U.
institutions into account. Meanwhile the city is on the lookout for
a runaway pig. And what about the farmers who take to the streets
to protest against restrictions blocking the export of pigs to
China? ************************************** See what the critics
are saying about The Capital: "Omniscient" New York Times "An
exceptional work" Kirkus Reviews "Deliciously witty" Metro "Elegant
. . . brilliantly constructed" Die Zeit "Robert Menasse is
pioneering the genre of Eurolit" Financial Times WINNER OF THE
GERMAN BOOK PRIZE Translated from the German by Jamie Bulloch
In 2010, Robert Menasse journeyed to Brussels to begin work on a
novel centered on the European Union. His extended stay resulted in
a completely different book--Enraged Citizens, European Peace and
Democratic Deficits, a work of nonfiction examining the history of
the European project and the evolving politics of nation-states.
Spanning from the beginning of the transnational idea with 1951's
Montanunion--the European Coal and Steel Community--to the current
financial crisis, Menasse focuses on the institutional structures
and forces both advancing and obstructing the European project.
Given the internal tensions among the European Commission,
Parliament, and Council, Menasse argues that current problems that
are frequently misunderstood as resulting from the financial crisis
are, in fact, political. Along the way, he makes the bold claim
that either the Europe of nation-states will perish--or the project
of transcending the nation-states will. A provocative book, Enraged
Citizens, European Peace and Democratic Deficits deftly analyzes
the financial and bureaucratic structures of the European Union and
sheds much-needed light on the state of the debt crisis. Menasse
brings his considerable literary expertise to the unraveling of the
real state of the Union, along the way weaving an intriguing tale
of one continent's efforts to become a truly postnational
democracy.
Robert Menasse, who was born into a Jewish family in Vienna in
1954, speaks with the voice of the generation known as Nachgeborene
("those born after"). Although fortunate to have escaped the
persecution and exile his parents endured, Menasse's stories
constantly refract the suffering of the past through the ironic
distance of a feeling observer. His critically humorous voice
uncovers surprising truths about himself and the past. As the
author of over twenty books, which include critical essays on
contemporary cultural topics as well as novels and short stories,
Menasse's fame as a major figure in contemporary Austrian
literature is firmly established. He has received many prestigious
literary prizes and divides his time between Vienna and Amsterdam.
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