The End of a Family Story explained

The End of a Family Story
Author:Péter Nádas
Title Orig:Egy családregény vége
Translator:Imre Goldstein
Country:Hungary
Language:Hungarian
Publisher:Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó
Pub Date:1977
English Pub Date:1998
Pages:230
Isbn:978-963-15-0784-3

The End of a Family Story (Hungarian: '''Egy családregény vége''') is a 1977 novel by the Hungarian writer Péter Nádas. The narrative follows a boy who grows up in Hungary in the 1950s, and whose grandfather tells him stories about their family's past. The prose frequently shifts in form and perspective. An English translation by Imre Goldstein was published in 1998 through Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Reception

Ken Kalfus reviewed the book for The New York Times, and wrote that its "tediousness is as profound as the themes it seeks to engage." Kalfus continued: "The difficulty -- no, impenetrability -- of this novel probably cannot be laid to the translator, Imre Goldstein, who collaborated on the more lucid translation of A Book of Memories. Here Nadas's method of telling -- or not telling -- a story does not seem to be dependent on the translator's choice of words. Regardless of whose words they are, the structure that encloses them fails to intensify their emotional charge."[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kalfus. Ken. Ken Kalfus. 1998-11-22. Rationed Indents. The New York Times. 2011-11-27.