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The Third Tower: Journeys in Italy
Paperback
Main Details
Title |
The Third Tower: Journeys in Italy
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Antal Szerb
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Translated by Len Rix
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback | Pages:112 | Dimensions(mm): Height 165,Width 120 |
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Category/Genre | Literary essays Classic travel writing |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781782270539
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Classifications | Dewey:914.50491 |
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
Includes 9 b/w photographs
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Pushkin Press
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Imprint |
Pushkin Press
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Publication Date |
27 March 2014 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
A typically brilliant, ironic and moving travelogue by one of the twentieth century's greatest writers In August 1936 a Hungarian writer in his mid-thirties arrives by train in Venice, on a journey overshadowed by the coming war and charged with intense personal nostalgia. Aware that he might never again visit this land whose sites and scenes had once exercised a strange and terrifying power over his imagination, he immerses himself in a stream of discoveries, reappraisals and inevitable self-revelations. From Venice, he traces the route taken by the Germanic invaders of old down to Ravenna, to stand, fulfilling a lifelong dream, before the sacred mosaics of San Vitale. This journey into his private past brings Antal Szerb firmly, and at times painfully, up against an explosive present, producing some memorable observations on the social wonders and existential horrors of Mussolini's new Roman Imperium. Antal Szerb was born in Budapest in 1901. Best known in the West as a novelist and short story writer, he was also a prolific scholar whose interests ranged widely across the whole field of European literature. Debarred from a university post by reason of his Jewish ancestry, he taught in a commercial secondary school until increasing persecution led to his brutal death in a labour camp, in 1945. Yet the tone of his writing is almost always deceptively light, the fierce intelligence softened by a gentle tolerance, wry humour and understated irony. Pushkin Press's publications of Szerb's work include his novels Journey by Moonlight, Oliver VII and The Pendragon Legend, as well as the short story collection Love in a Bottle and the history The Queen's Necklace.
Author Biography
Antal Szerb was born in Budapest in 1901. Best known in the West as a novelist and short story writer, he was also a prolific scholar whose interests ranged widely across the whole field of European literature. Debarred from a university post by reason of his Jewish ancestry, he taught in a commercial secondary school until increas- ing persecution led to his brutal death in a labour camp, in 1945. Yet the tone of his writing is almost always deceptively light, the fierce intelligence softened by a gentle tolerance, wry humour and understated irony. Pushkin Press's publications of Szerb's work include his novels Journey by Moonlight, Oliver VII and The Pendragon Legend, as well as the short story collection Love in a Bottle and the history The Queen's Necklace.
ReviewsA writer of immense subtlety and generosity, with an uncommonly light touch which masks its own artistry. His novels transform farce into poetry, comic melancholy into a kind of self-effacing grace... Antal Szerb is one of the great European writers -- Ali Smith Szerb belongs with the master novelists of the 20th century -- Paul Bailey Daily Telegraph Szerb is a master novelist whose powers transcend time and language -- Nicholas Lezard Guardian ovely little volume... by turns poetic, nostalgic, melancholy and personal. New Statesman Perfect... sensitive and intellectual New Welsh Review The prose is intimate and disarming... While nominally it is an account of Szerb's solitary travels... what elevates it is Szerb's ability to not only describe the physical landscape but the mental Publishers Weekly This is travelogue as philosophical meditation -- Eileen Battersby Irish Times (Books of the Year)
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