Love and Garbage explained

Love and Garbage (Czech: Láska a smetí) is a 1986 novel by Czech writer Ivan Klíma.[1]

Publication

Banned from publishing in the Czechoslovakia while the country was under Soviet influence, but after the end of the cold war in 1989, the novel was rushed into print in his home country, selling over 100,000 copies.

Synopsis

The novel uses a first person narrative to explore the suffering and challenges of a dissident artist forced to be a trash collector in Communist Prague.[2] [3] In particular, the novel explores how different people are connected to each other through human experience. To prepare for writing the novel, Klima actually spent a few days in a street sweeper role.[4]

Reception

The novel was the most successful of Klíma's books.[5] Though the review by Eva Hoffman in the New York Times was mixed, she concludes that the novel "affords the experience, rare in today's fiction, of being in the presence of a seasoned, measured perspective, and a mind that strives honestly to arrive at a wisdom sufficient to our common condition."

Further sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The interview: Ivan Klima. Adams. Tim. 2009-08-01. the Guardian. 2016-05-05.
  2. News: Romancing the Street Sweeper. Hoffman. Eva. May 12, 1991. The New York Times Books.
  3. News: Clean Sweep. Horne. Philip. 1990-05-10. London Review of Books. 26–27. 0260-9592. 2016-05-05.
  4. Web site: Europe of Cultures - Interview with Ivan Klima regarding Love and Garbage - Ina.fr. Europe of Cultures. 2016-05-05.
  5. Web site: The interview: Ivan Klima. Adams. Tim. 2009-08-01. the Guardian. 2016-05-05.