Katalin Street
By Magda Szabo
Translated by Len Rix
By Magda Szabo
Translated by Len Rix
By Magda Szabo
Translated by Len Rix
By Magda Szabo
Translated by Len Rix
Category: Historical Fiction
Category: Historical Fiction
-
$18.95
Sep 12, 2017 | ISBN 9781681371528
-
Sep 12, 2017 | ISBN 9781681371535
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
The Enchanters
The Puzzle Box
This Cursed House
Straw Dogs of the Universe
The Vaster Wilds
North Woods
Every Man Dies Alone
Son of a Wanted Man (Louis L’Amour Lost Treasures)
The Armor of Light
Praise
“In Katalin Street, the past is never dormant, never settled. The past is an open wound, a life force busily shaping an increasingly bewildering present. In describing Henriette’s plight, Szabó writes: ‘From the moment she arrived she had been left to work out the rules and the customs of the place entirely by herself.’ In this extraordinary novel, the same could be said for the living.” —Laura van den Berg, The New York Times Book Review
“The story of four neighboring families in Budapest whose lives are upended by World War II, Szabo’s bewitching novel is the most convincing ghost story I’ve ever read. You feel this towering Hungarian novelist might have actually figured out the mystery of the afterlife.”—Nell Freudenberger, The Week
“Szabó sketches an unforgettable portrait of the Elekes family. . . . This is the rare book that you’ll finish and want to go right back to the beginning to reread the first two chapters, if only to better understand Irén’s fate.” —Priyanka Kumar, Santa Fe New Mexican
“[Szabó’s] prose is a powerful reminder of just how resonant the relationship between language and memory can be, especially when entangled within the matrices of families and communities living under the shadow of fascism . . . [Katalin Street] is a brightly shining star in the Szabó universe, offering us a glimpse of Eastern Europe at a time when we need to be reminded of what happened there more than ever.” —World Literature Today
“Magda Szabó’s moving novel Katalin Street explores the way the past is alive in the present, still shaping life in mysterious ways that are hard to understand. . . . Eliciting a bittersweet beauty, Katalin Street is a powerful novel about life, death and humanity’s elusive sense of place and purpose.” —Scott Neuffer, Shelf Awareness
“A gorgeous elegy for the joy and the life once shared among three neighboring families—the Elekes, the Temes, and the Helds—in prewar Budapest . . . Readers will be impressed by the brilliant texture and forthrightness of Szabó’s prose, along with the particular urgency she infuses into the humiliations and irrational longings that comprise her characters’ lives, even or especially during the shock of war. . . . This is a brilliant and unforgettable novel.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Three families, whose lives are inextricably linked by the street they inhabit, grapple with love and morality amid political upheaval. In English for the first time and impeccably translated by Rix, Szabó’s quietly captivating novel excavates the tangled history of Hungary’s capital from the portentous moments before the German occupation to its suffocating postwar regime. . . . A visceral, sweeping depiction of life in the shuddering wake of wartime.” —Kirkus, starred review
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In