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A Book of Memories: A Novel

A Book of Memories: A Novel

Current price: $28.00
Publication Date: July 22nd, 2008
Publisher:
Picador
ISBN:
9780312427962
Pages:
720
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

First published in Hungary in 1986 after a five-year battle with censors, Péter Nádas's A Book of Memories is a modern classic, a multi-layered narrative that tells three parallel stories of love and betrayal. The first takes place in East Berlin in the 1970s and features an unnamed Hungarian writer ensnared in a love triangle with a young German and a famous aging actress. The second, composed by the writer, is the story of a late nineteenth century German aesthete whose experiences mirror his own. And the third voice is that of a friend from the writer's childhood, who brings his own unexpected bearing to the story. Compared by critics to Proust, Mann, and Joyce, this sensuous tour de force is "unquestionably a masterpiece" (The New Republic).

About the Author

Péter Nádas is the author of the novels A Book of Memories, The End of a Family Story, and Love. He lives in Gombosszeg, in western Hungary.

Praise for A Book of Memories: A Novel

“The greatest novel written in our time, and one of the great books of the century.” —Susan Sontag

“A vast, astonishing, reverberant novel . . . It is a comprehensive and all-comprehending book about politics, sex, art, history, psychology, mortality, and memory.” —Richard Dyer, The Boston Globe

“A huge philosophically complex, sensuously textured novel.” —Eva Hoffman, The New York Times Book Review

“A magnum opus . . . [Nádas] articulates erotic experience with surpassing precision and grace. . . . There is great beauty to the writing.” —Susan Miron, The Wall Street Journal

“There is a wealth of accomplishment in A Book of Memories. It is an epic and immensely fertile exploration of contemporary history and sensibility.” —Richard Eder, Los Angeles Times

“A superb achievement, by a world-class writer.” —Susan Ruben Suleiman, The Village Voice

A Book of Memories will endure as a great moral expression of the European crucible of public and private souls, genuinely worthy of Proust, Henry James, Musil, and Mann as an authoritative testimony to the intellectual and emotional lives of an epoch.” —The Seattle Times