Description
‘Liquidation, suspenseful and bleakly comic, reads like a treatise on the mystery of the end of life and the mystery of suicide… A compelling if deeply unsettling work’ Independent Kingbitter, an editor at a failing publishing house, believes himself to have been the closest friend of B., a celebrated writer and Auschwitz survivor, who recently committed suicide. Amongst the papers B. has left him, Kingbitter finds a play entitled Liquidation that uncannily predicts the behaviour of B.’s ex-wife, his mistress and Kingbitter himself. As he obsessively reads and rereads the play, Kingbitter becomes transfixed with the idea that buried within these papers is B.’s great novel: the book that will explain his relationship with Auschwitz.
Additional information
| Weight | 0.106 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 0.8 × 12.9 × 19.8 cm |
| Format | Paperback |
| language1 | |
| Pages | 144 |
| Publisher | |
| Year Published | 2017-9-7 |
| Imprint | |
| Publication City/Country | London, United Kingdom |
| ISBN 10 | 1784872164 |
| 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 | A beautiful glimpse of the wide-open spaces of storytelling |
| Other text | A masterly, subtle and constantly surprising novel, which, in this fine translation, reads as if it were written in this century, not the last |




