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George Konrad (1933–2019)

Author of The Case Worker

66+ Works 1,244 Members 20 Reviews 8 Favorited

About the Author

George Konrad is president of the Academy of Art in Berlin.

Series

Works by George Konrad

The Case Worker (1969) 220 copies
A Feast in the Garden (1985) 202 copies
De medeplichtige (1978) 119 copies
The City Builder (1977) 115 copies
De stenen klok (1994) 36 copies
Zonsverduistering (2003) 35 copies
Melinda en Dragomán (1991) 34 copies
Het verdriet van de hanen (2005) 25 copies
Slingerbeweging (2008) 24 copies
Antipolitics (1984) 19 copies
De schrijver en de stad (2004) 18 copies
Nalatenschap (1998) 17 copies
De onzichtbare stem (2000) 17 copies
Amsterdam (1999) 10 copies
The Invisible (1999) 4 copies
Über Juden (2012) 4 copies
Taperen (1990) 3 copies
Drømmen om Mellom-Europa (1991) 3 copies
Zsidókról (2010) 3 copies
Posetilac (1991) 2 copies
Heimkehr (1995) 2 copies
Harangjáték (2009) 1 copy
Inga (2008) 1 copy
Stenuret : roman (1996) 1 copy
El reloj de piedra (2006) 1 copy
91-93 (1993) 1 copy
Stubovi kulture (1976) 1 copy
A látogató 1 copy
Tuinfeest 1 copy
A látogató 1 copy
Il perdente (1995) 1 copy
Iskušenja autonomije (1991) 1 copy
Tuinfeest 1 copy

Associated Works

One Minute Stories (1977) — Afterword, some editions — 211 copies
Best European Fiction 2010 (2009) — Contributor — 166 copies
Ungarn und Europa. Positionen und Digressionen (2013) — Contributor — 1 copy

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Members

Reviews

1. Letteratura concentrazionaria (quando si parla di prigionia in Russia e in Ungheria)
2. Romanzo di guerra (Croci Frecciate vs Armata Rossa se le danno sul fronte orientale)
3. Classico mitteleuropeo alla Roth (le vicende del nonno e della moglie... wow, sembrava il buon Joseph!)
4. Romanzo storico (le alterne vicende di un intellettuale magiaro che, tra un imprigionamento e l'altro, deve imparare a convivere con la polizia politica; la mitica (e smitizzata) rivolta del '56)
5. Romanzo d'amore (l'amore ai tempi del regime sovietico in Ungheria di due intellettuali delusi dall'Urss ma che non credono che Oltrecortina le cose vadano granché meglio)
6. Romanzo umoristico (Konrad ironizza sul circuito degli intellettuali conferenzieri e in generale sul clima intellettuale dell'Ungheria comunista strappando più di un sorriso)
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Flagged
downisthenewup | Aug 17, 2017 |
Gyorgy Konrad's novel "The Case Worker" is incredibly bleak, but well written. I liked the book overall, even though it had some pretty disturbing scenes in it, making it a book I wouldn't particularly want to read again.

The story is set in Hungary, where a social services worker becomes very engaged with one of his clients -- a little boys whose parents have died. The boy has high special needs and no one to take care of him.

The novel is pretty gritty and a bit sad, but presents an interesting point of view. I'm glad to have read it.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
amerynth | 2 other reviews | Jan 19, 2016 |
"A rabbi once said: God is the collective conscience of people. Why should there be God? Why should He mean more than the Word itself?" (120)
 
Flagged
allison.sivak | Sep 10, 2013 |
This was a difficult book to read and is a difficult one to write about. Why? Both because of the structure of the novel and because of Konrád's writing style. The narrator is a city planner in an unnamed Hungarian town who has lived through both World War II and the communist takeover. But the reader doesn't know this at first (except from reading the blurb on the back of the book). Instead, the book begins as the narrator wakes up one morning and muses about various topics including the death of his wife. But he muses in what is essentially a stream of consciousness way, and the whole book is like this, occasionally direct and understandable but more often dream-like and even surrealistic. Additionally, Konrád writes by piling phrase upon phrase, image upon image, and it is often not at all clear what he is writing about or how one topic connects to another.

Essentially, the narrator is reviewing his life, but in a nonchronological manner. The reader learns not only about the death of his wife, but about his childhood, his father, how he met his wife, the nature of his work and how it differs from that of his father who was a pre-communism planner and architect, the nature of socialist planning, wartime, prison, torture, God and religion, and more. The novel is also a meditation on the meaning of life and freedom, history and social revolutions, cities and communities, and fathers and sons. But all of this is enveloped in prose that is hard to decipher, although beautifully written. Here is an example, by far not the most obscure.

For me, this city is a challenge, a parable, an interrogation frozen in space, the messages of my fellow citizens dead and alive, a system of disappearing and regenerating worlds to come, the horizontal delineation of societies replacing one another by sperm, gunfire, senility; a fossilized tug of war, an Eastern European showcase of devastation and reconstruction . . . Because by virtue of my practiced clichés I have become one of its shareholders; though beyond the tenuous links of my existence and surroundings, beyond my father's overdecorated gravestone and the haunting shadow of a cremated woman, beyond my hardened and irremediable blueprints, my myopic utopias, and the procession of figures out of an ever-darkening past, I could well ask: what have I to do with this East-Central European city whose every shame I know so well. p.22

The introduction to my Dalkey Archive edition, by Carlos Fuentes, compares the experience and writing style of Central Europeans to those of writers from Central and South America and contrasts them with writers from the west, and especially those from the US who, to oversimplify, he feels are always seeking happiness. I didn't find his thoughts particularly helpful in understanding Konrád or this book, but I see some parallels between Konrád's writing style and that of Fuentes in Terra Nostra although, of course, they deal with very different subjects.

I felt lost through a lot of this novel but, having finished, I almost feel I should start at the beginning again to more fully appreciate what Konrád was doing. I feel I missed a lot the first time through, but I understood enough to realize what an impressive writer Konrád is and what complicated ideas he was exploring.
… (more)
12 vote
Flagged
rebeccanyc | Feb 17, 2013 |

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Works
66
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Popularity
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Rating
3.8
Reviews
20
ISBNs
147
Languages
14
Favorited
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