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  • Broschiertes Buch

"In a small town in Communist Hungary, Andrâas Szabad's childhood comes to an abrupt end with his father's return from prison and the death of his loving mother. In search of new beginnings, Andrâas moves with his father to Budapest, where he discovers a passion for photography, for uncovering the invisible through the visible, and for fixing matter and memory so as to ward them against the inevitability of time. An unorthodox first encounter brings Andrâas together with âEva, and soon they become entangled in a psychosexual relationship of consuming passion, but also of bitterness and resentment"--…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"In a small town in Communist Hungary, Andrâas Szabad's childhood comes to an abrupt end with his father's return from prison and the death of his loving mother. In search of new beginnings, Andrâas moves with his father to Budapest, where he discovers a passion for photography, for uncovering the invisible through the visible, and for fixing matter and memory so as to ward them against the inevitability of time. An unorthodox first encounter brings Andrâas together with âEva, and soon they become entangled in a psychosexual relationship of consuming passion, but also of bitterness and resentment"--
Autorenporträt
The Romanian-Hungarian writer Attila Bartis is one of the most accomplished and inventive members of the contemporary Eastern European literary vanguard. With a background in photography, Bartis has published dozens of books to critical acclaim across the genres of theater, photography and fiction. He received the the Tibor Déry Prize and the Sandor Márai Prize for his novel Tranquility, whose 2008 translation by Archipelago was awarded the inaugural Best Translated Book Award.    Judith Sollosy is a prolific translator and speaker based in Budapest. She has published two books on the art of translation and her work has appeared in CrossCurrents, PEN America, The New Yorker, Common Knowledge and elsewhere. She was awarded the Hungarian PEN Club’s Ady Medal for her work popularizing Hungarian literature in the United States.