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Dossier K: A Memoir
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Dossier K: A Memoir Paperback - 2013

by Kertész, Imre

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Details

  • Title Dossier K: A Memoir
  • Author Kertész, Imre
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition [ Edition: repri
  • Condition Used - Good
  • Pages 224
  • Language EN
  • Publisher Melville House, Brooklyn, New York
  • Date 2013-05-07
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 1612192025.G
  • ISBN 9781612192024

From the publisher

IMRE KERTÉSZ was born in Hungary in 1929. At the age of fourteen he was imprisoned at Auschwitz and later at the Buchenwald concentration camps. He is the author of 14 books of fiction and non-fiction, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 2002 for “writing that upholds the fragile experience of the individual against the barbaric arbitrariness of history.”

Translator TIM WILKINSON is the primary English translator of Imre Kertész as well as numerous other significant works of Hungarian history and literature. In 2005, his translation of Kertész’s Fatelessness was awarded the PEN Club/Book of the Month Club Translation Prize. He lives in London. 

Media reviews

"A book full of marvellous, intoxicating answers…It is rare that we find what at first sight seems a philosophical quibble of a memoir such a page turner, but that is what it is. The reader is constantly on the scent of truth about the most basic, most dreadful, most vital human affairs. It is what makes Kertesz a great writer."
The Times (UK)

”An unflinching memoir in the form of a Socratic dialogue with himself about his extraordinary life…Kertész is meditative, insightful, profound.”
Publisher’s Weekly (starred review)


”Kertész’s sensibility defies classification. To call him unique would be to miss the point; it would diminish his frankness, his modesty, his shocking honesty that, he would remind us, is not the same as telling the truth…A necessary work, beautifully translated.”
ALA Booklist


“The opposite of a Bildungsroman, its defining features are not organic development and continuity but rupture and shock. . . Kertész attempts to reconnect to humanity, to define himself as an individual, as the subject of his own history.”
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 


“A counterpart of Günter Grass’s Peeling The Onion. Just as accurate and relentless, a book of autobiographical self-questioning, which undermines any kind of dogmatism.”
Neue Zurcher Zeitung

Priase for Imre Kertesz 
“Kertész, like Beckett, is deadly serious and his work is a profound meditation on the great and enduring themes of love, death and the problem of evil.” —John Banville, The Nation 

About the author

IMRE KERTSZ was born in Hungary in 1929. At the age of fourteen he was imprisoned at Auschwitz and later at the Buchenwald concentration camps. He is the author of 14 books of fiction and non-fiction, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 2002 for "writing that upholds the fragile experience of the individual against the barbaric arbitrariness of history."

Translator TIM WILKINSON is the primary English translator of Imre Kertsz as well as numerous other significant works of Hungarian history and literature. In 2005, his translation of Kertsz's Fatelessness was awarded the PEN Club/Book of the Month Club Translation Prize. He lives in London.