Imre Kertesz - Nobel Prize in Literature, 2002 (5 books)

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Added on May 10, 2014 by coldnorthwindin Books > Ebooks
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  • Book: Fatelessness
  • ISBN13: 9781400078639
  • ISBN10: 1400078636

Imre Kertesz - Nobel Prize in Literature, 2002 (5 books) (Size: 6.65 MB)
 Kertesz, Imre - Fatelessness (Vintage, 2004).epub273.11 KB
 Kertesz, Imre - Fatelessness (Vintage, 2004).jpg25.6 KB
 Kertesz, Imre - Fiasco (Melville House, 2011).epub2.15 MB
 Kertesz, Imre - Fiasco (Melville House, 2011).jpg60.89 KB
 Kertesz, Imre - Kaddish for an Unborn Child (Vintage, 2004).epub184.84 KB
 Kertesz, Imre - Kaddish for an Unborn Child (Vintage, 2004).jpg23.89 KB
 Kertesz, Imre - Union Jack, The (Melville House, 2009).epub1.71 MB
 Kertesz, Imre - Union Jack, The (Melville House, 2009).jpg35.43 KB
 Kertesz, Imre - Dossier K (Melville House, 2013).epub2.15 MB
 Kertesz, Imre - Dossier K (Melville House, 2013).jpg60.66 KB


Description

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IMRE KERTÉSZ (b. 1929) is a Hungarian author, Holocaust concentration camp survivor, and recipient of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Literature, "for writing that upholds the fragile experience of the individual against the barbaric arbitrariness of history." His work has established him as one of the most powerful, unsentimental, and imaginatively daring writers of our time.

His best-known work, FATELESSNESS (1975), is a semi-autobiographical novel about a 14-year-old Hungarian Jew's experiences in the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps. It is the first volume in a trilogy of novels.

FIASCO (1988), the second volume in the trilogy, tells an epic story of the author's return from the Nazi death camps, only to find his country taken over by another totalitarian government. Kertész has described it as "fiction founded on reality" -- a Kafka-like account that is surprisingly funny in its unrelentingly pessimistic clarity, of the Communist takeover of his homeland.

The final volume in the trilogy, KADDISH FOR AN UNBORN CHILD (1990), deals with the struggles of a Holocaust survivor after the war, explaining to a friend why he cannot bring a child into a world that could allow such atrocities to happen. The book also deals with the narrator's failed marriage, his unsuccessful literary career, and the concept of his Jewishness.

In the haunting novella THE UNION JACK (1991), the narrator recounts a simple anecdote -- his sighting of the Union Jack, the British flag -- during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, in the days preceding the uprising's brutal repression by the Soviet army. In the telling, partly a digressive meditation on "the absurd order of chance," he recalls his youthful self, and the epiphanies of his intellectual and spiritual awakening -- an awakening to a kind of radical subjectivity.

DOSSIER K. (2006) is Kertész's response to the hasty biographies and profiles that followed his 2002 Nobel Prize for Literature -- an attempt to set the record straight. The result is an extraordinary self-portrait, in which Kertész interrogates himself about the course of his own remarkable life and continues to delve into the questions that have long occupied him: the legacy of the Holocaust, the distinctions drawn between fiction and reality, and what he calls "that wonderful burden of being responsible for oneself."


The following books are in ePUB format:

* DOSSIER K. (Melville House, 2013). Translated by Tom Wilkinson.

* FATELESSNESS (Vintage, 2004). Translated by Tom Wilkinson.

* FIASCO (Melville House, 2011). Translated by Tom Wilkinson.

* KADDISH FOR AN UNBORN CHILD (Vintage, 2004). Translated by Tom Wilkinson.

* THE UNION JACK (Melville House, 2013). Translated by Tom Wilkinson.

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Imre Kertesz - Nobel Prize in Literature, 2002 (5 books)

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Not an author I know but I look forward to reading. Thanks to uploader and seeders.