A link to my post on the novel IMDb.com link From The New York Times: a review of the movie and an article on Kertész and the movie (both of which I’ll reference in the post) Since I posted so much about the book in the link above I’ll try and keep this post short. […]
Tag: Imre Kertesz
“But who can judge what is possible or believable in a concentration camp? Who could explore, exhaust all those countless ideas, inventions, games, jokes, and ponderable theories, which are easily accessible and transferable from a make-believe world of fantasy into a concentration-camp reality? You couldn’t, even if you mustered the totality of your knowledge.” (148) […]
Here’s an excerpt from The Paris Review’s interview with Imre Kertész. One quote from it: To me, there were three phases, in a literary sense. The first phase is the one just before the Holocaust. Times were tough, but you could get through somehow. The second phase, described by writers like Primo Levi, takes place […]
The summer issue of The Paris Review will be out soon (according to this announcement). While there are several interesting articles/reviews/interviews mentioned, the one that caught my eye was an interview (supposedly the last one he’ll give) with Imre Kertész. I just started reading Fateless and needless to say I’m impressed. From the teaser in […]