Camp Notebook

Camp Notebook

paperback
Published: 1 August, 2019
Standard worldwide delivery by Mon, July 20 - Thu, July 23
Order within 0
Condition: NEW
$13.88
RRP $14.70
You save $0.83 (6%)
Price includes shipping
Available 3 in stock
- +
FREE Returns within 30 days

Description

Miklós Radnóti was one of the most talented young poets in 1930s Hungary. He developed a unique poetic voice: in verses of rare luminosity, he gave a vivid, complex vision of love and pain, exuberance and foreboding. Although his voice was deeply individual, he was writing well within the European mainstream: a talented translator, he published Hungarian versions of verses by Blake and Keats, Apollinaire and Eluard, Brecht and Rilke, and many others.

During the Second World War, being of Jewish descent, Radnóti served three periods of forced labour, the last in a slave camp in northern Serbia. Here, in a tiny concealed notebook, he wrote his last and finest poems. In November 1944, in the western Hungarian town of Abda, Radnóti was shot whilst being force-marched towards Germany during the liberation of the Balkans. His body was exhumed from a ditch after the war, and identified from the notebook in his pocket.

The fame of this notebook (the pages of which are reproduced at the beginning of this volume) does not only rest on the poignancy of its story; Camp Notebook is a masterpiece in its own right, a crucial work of European verse. It is one of the greatest pieces of literature to emerge from the Holocaust, and probably the finest volume of poetry born from the horror of the Second World War.

See more

More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781910345344
ISBN10 1910345342
Number Of Pages 86
Item Weight 126 g
Publisher / Reseller Arc Publications
Format paperback
Edition 2nd edition
See More +