Prague, Vol. 2 - Book Review,
by Paul Wilson (Editor)

Amazon.com The city of Prague has inspired a lot of fine literature, and Paul Wilson has done the English-speaking world a vast favor by compiling this anthology of 23 Prague stories. There are classics by the likes of Franz Kafka, Jan Neruda, and Ivan Klima, and lesser-known works making their English-translation debuts. There are autobiographical pieces, fiction, legend, stories from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, tales from the Soviet regime, and contemporary pieces from the Czech Republic. Ivan Klima's epilogue is titled "The Spirit of Prague," and after reviewing Prague's history--cultural and political--he concludes that paradox is at Prague's heart, and irony and ridicule are its primary tools. Both devices are employed deftly throughout Wilson's anthology, providing clever, lyrical, and moving snippets of Prague's complex reality.
From Publishers Weekly Novelist Ivan Klima explains in "The Spirit of Prague" that his native city has inspired people's creativity by the blending of three cultures that lived side by side for decades, even centuries: Czech, German and Jewish. It is also a city in which "the best people in the country were often imprisoned, tortured or executed." Czech writers deal with such injustices with a subversive sense of humor. It shines in Bohumil Hrabal's description of "The Hotel Pariz," Josef Skvorecky's rendition of President Clinton's sax playing at the Reduta jazz club, Egon Erwin Kisch's "The Case of the Washerwoman," and Jaroslav Hasek's sendup of The Society of Teetotalers. To see human comedy in the midst of great suffering allowed the spirit of Prague to prevail, and that is the genius of the authors presented here. These 24 stories, arranged by the areas of the city they illuminate, are a literary banquet for readers who already know and love "the city of a hundred spires." As such, they are designed, according to editor Wilson, to reveal "a deeper truth about the psyche of the people of Prague than perhaps direct description could." Also included are biographies of contributors and translators and a historical chronology of Prague. Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal This book is a compilation of short stories set in or around the city of Prague. As readers wanders through the imaginations of the authors, who include Franz Kafka, Josef Skvorecky, Bohumil Hrabal, Jaroslav Hasek, Karel Capek, and Daniela Hodrova, they will find themselves assuming an understanding of this magnificent city's essense and history. The stories, myths, legends, and vignettes explore the city's streets, palaces, cathedrals, restaurants, and beer halls; the ambience and soul of Prague is revealed. This work is not a travel guide but a collection of literary pieces set in a mysterious city over the past century. It would be great fun to read before traveling to Prague or while there, but the short stories stand on their as individual works of art. For comprehensive travel and literature collections.Melinda Stivers Leach, Precision Editorial Srvcs., Wondervu, Col.Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Book Description story anthology from Prague, tr various from Czech
Language Notes Text: English (translation) Original Language: Czech
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