Abel And Cain

Author: Gregor von Rezzori; David Dollenmayer (Translator); Joachim Neugroschel (Translator); Marshall Yarbrough (Translator); Joshua Cohen (Introduction by)

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General Fields

  • : $42.99 AUD
  • : 9781681373256
  • : New York Review of Books, Incorporated, The
  • : New York Review of Books, Incorporated, The
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  • : 0.368317
  • : 09 April 2019
  • : --- length: - '8' width: - '5' units: - Inches
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  • : books

Special Fields

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  • : Gregor von Rezzori; David Dollenmayer (Translator); Joachim Neugroschel (Translator); Marshall Yarbrough (Translator); Joshua Cohen (Introduction by)
  • : Paperback
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  • :
  • : English
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  • :
  • :
  • : 864
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Barcode 9781681373256
9781681373256

Description

Appearing together in English for the first time, two masterpieces that take on the jazz age, the Nuremburg trials, postwar commercialism, and the feat of writing a book, presented in one brilliant volume

In 1985, Gregor von Rezzori published an English translation of a novel entitled The Death of My Brother Abel. The ambition of the work, certainly the most brilliant and extravagant of Rezzori's career, was immediately recognized, but; the transla- tion was deemed faulty. Now Abel appears in a revised translation along with the prequel that Rezzori promised in its last pages, Cain. Here Abel and Cain are finally united as Rezzori intended, giving readers a chance to appreciate the genius of one of the twentieth-century's great provocateurs.

The Death of My Brother Abel zigzags across the middle of the twentieth century, from the 1918 to 1968, taking in the Jazz Age, the Anschluss, the Nuremberg trials, and postwar commercialism. At the center of the book is the unnamed narrator, holed up in a Paris hotel and writing a kind of novel, a collage of sardonic and passionate set pieces about love and work, sex and writing, families and nations, and human treachery and cruelty. In Cain, that narrator is revealed as Aristide Subics, or so at least it appears, since Subics' identity is as unstable as the fictional apparatus that contains him and the times he lived through. Questions abound: How can a man who lived in a time of lies know himself? And is it even possible to tell the story of an era of lies truthfully? Primarily set in the bombed-out, rubble- strewn Hamburg of the years just after the war, the dark confusion and deadly confrontation and of Cain and Abel, inseparable brothers, goes on.