logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Fatelessness - Imre Kertész
Fatelessness
by: (author)
Fourteen-year-old Gyuri is let off going to school for 'family reasons'. His father has been called up for labour service. Arriving at the family timber store Gyuri witnesses his father sign over the business to the firm's book-keeper with nonchalance and boredom. Two months laters after saying... show more
Fourteen-year-old Gyuri is let off going to school for 'family reasons'. His father has been called up for labour service. Arriving at the family timber store Gyuri witnesses his father sign over the business to the firm's book-keeper with nonchalance and boredom. Two months laters after saying goodbye to his father he finds himself assigned to a 'permanent workplace'. Within a fortnight Gyuri is unexpectedly pulled off the bus and detained without explanation This is the start of his journey to and subsequent imprisonment in Auschwitz. On arrival he finds he is unable to identify with other Jews, and in turn is rejected by them. An outsider among his own people, his estrangement makes him a preternaturally acute observer.Fatelessness' power lies in its refusal to mitigate the unfathomable alienness of the Holocaust, the strangeness is compounded by Georg's dogmatic insistence on making sense of everything he witnesses.
show less
Format: kindle
ASIN: B0035OC7WW
Publisher: Vintage Digital
Pages no: 272
Edition language: English
Bookstores:
Community Reviews
philoSophie
philoSophie rated it
4.0 Το μυθιστόρημα ενός ανθρώπου δίχως πεπρωμένο
Γιατί ακόμα κι εκεί, στις καπνοδόχους, στα διαλείμματα ανάμεσα σε όλα εκείνα τα μαρτύρια υπήρχε κάτι που έμοιαζε με ευτυχία. Όλοι με ρωτούν μονάχα για τα δεινά, για τις "φρικαλεότητες": παρόλο που για μένα αυτή ακριβώς η ανάμνηση είναι εκείνη που αξίζει περισσότερο απ' όλες να θυμάμαι. Ναι, γι' αυτά...
Moje książki
Moje książki rated it
4.5 Los utracony
Groza Holokaustu widziana oczami dziecka niby naiwna lecz tym bardziej uświadamiająca przemysł zabijania.
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it
3.0 Fatelessness by Imre Kertész
bookshelves: published-1975, nobel-laureate, anti-semitic, autumn-2013, hardback, historical-fiction, hungary, holocaust-genocide, nazi-related Read from June 27 to October 29, 2013 Foyles, Charing Cross Road. Translated from the Hungarian by Tim WilkinsonOpening: I didn't go to school today. Or...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it
0.0
Foyles, Charing Cross Road. Translated from the Hungarian by Tim WilkinsonOpening: I didn't go to school today. Or rather, I did go, but only to ask my class teacher's permission to take the day off.
Boston Bibliophile
Boston Bibliophile rated it
5.0 Fatelessness
http://www.bostonbibliophile.com/2008/07/review-fatelessness-by-imre-kertesz.html
Other editions (15)
Books by Imre Kertész
On shelves
Share this Book
Need help?