Kaddish For An Unborn Child

8.99 JOD

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Description

‘A fine and powerful piece of work… Dark, at times cryptic, and hugely energetic’ Irish Times “No!” is the first word of this haunting novel. It is how a middle-aged Hungarian-Jewish writer answers an acquaintance who asks him if he has a child, and it is how he answered his wife years earlier when she told him that she wanted one. The loss, longing and regret that haunt the years between these two ‘No!’s give rise to one of the most eloquent meditations ever written on the Holocaust. As Kertész’s narrator addresses the child he couldn’t bear to bring into the world, he takes readers on a mesmerising, lyrical journey through his life, from his childhood to Auschwitz to his failed marriage.

Additional information

Weight 0.106 kg
Dimensions 0.8 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm
by

,

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

144

Publisher

Year Published

2017-9-7

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1784872172

About The Author

Imre Kertész was born in 1929 in Budapest. As a youth, he was imprisoned in Auschwitz and later in Buchenwald. He worked as a journalist and playwright before publishing Fateless, his first novel, in 1975. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2002. Imre Kertész died in Budapest in March 2016

Review Quote

Condenses a lifetime into a story told in a single night…exhilarating for [its] creative energy

Other text

Stunning… resembles such other memorably declamatory fictions as Camus' The Fall and Dostoyevsky's Notes from Underground