Miloš Urban (1967–)
Author of Lord Mord
Miloš Urban is Milo Urban (1). For other authors named Milo Urban, see the disambiguation page.
Miloš Urban (1) has been aliased into Miloš Urban.
About the Author
Image credit: Miloš Urban (1)
Works by Miloš Urban
Works have been aliased into Miloš Urban.
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Associated Works
Works have been aliased into Miloš Urban.
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1967-10-04
- Nationality
- Czech Republic
- Associated Place (for map)
- Czech Republic
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Reviews
"Lord Mord" opens with an edited extract from "Bestia Triumphans", an inflammatory pamphlet published in 1896 by Czech writer Vilém Mrštík in which he denounces the "clearance" and rebuilding of the Prague Jewish quarter, known as Josefov. The fictional plot of the novel unfolds against this historical backdrop. Its narrator is Count Arco, a thirty-year-old member of the minor Czech nobility who wastes his time and money on whores, alcohol and drugs and who knows the Jewry well thanks to show more his dubious nightly haunts.
It is difficult to warm to Arco - he is indolent and arrogant and his attitude to women is particularly demeaning. Indeed, this threatens to mar one's enjoyment of the novel, which lacks a strong female character to balance the misogyny of the protagonist. Arco, however, turns into an unlikely hero when he purchases an ancient house and stands up to the authorities when they include it in their demolition plans. In the fraught political atmosphere of the turn of the century, this borders on an act of treason against the Imperial authorities. As if this were not enough, Arco's path crosses that of "Kleinfleisch", a mythological bogeyman who starts to haunt the Jewish quarter, killing prostitutes close to Arco.
"Lord Mord" shares several elements with Urban's earlier and better known novel [b:The Seven Churches|24050504|The Seven Churches|Miloš Urban|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/book/50x75-a91bf249278a81aabab721ef782c4a74.png|4540871] - not least the Prague setting, the concept of the individual resisting "modern" developments and the serial killer subplot. This is, therefore, another "Gothic novel of Prague". However, whereas Seven Churches was based in 1990s Prague with mysterious flashbacks/visions of the Middle Ages, "Lord Mord" is squarely set a century before. I don't know about the original Czech version, but the flowing translation by Gerald Turner does not attempt to mimic the flowery language of the period. Rather than through a pastiche of earlier style, the novels of the 19th century are referenced through elements of plot and setting, which replicate common tropes of classic urban Gothic and adventure novels - narrow, foggy streets; drug-fuelled visions; consumptive prostitutes; serial killers sowing terror in the cover of the night; and also some final derring-do worthy of Dumas.
On the whole, I felt that whilst less original and striking than Seven Churches, "Lord Mord" is better crafted and more satisfactory from a purely narrative point of view. No cult novel then, but certainly an assured and entertaining one.
3.5* show less
It is difficult to warm to Arco - he is indolent and arrogant and his attitude to women is particularly demeaning. Indeed, this threatens to mar one's enjoyment of the novel, which lacks a strong female character to balance the misogyny of the protagonist. Arco, however, turns into an unlikely hero when he purchases an ancient house and stands up to the authorities when they include it in their demolition plans. In the fraught political atmosphere of the turn of the century, this borders on an act of treason against the Imperial authorities. As if this were not enough, Arco's path crosses that of "Kleinfleisch", a mythological bogeyman who starts to haunt the Jewish quarter, killing prostitutes close to Arco.
"Lord Mord" shares several elements with Urban's earlier and better known novel [b:The Seven Churches|24050504|The Seven Churches|Miloš Urban|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/book/50x75-a91bf249278a81aabab721ef782c4a74.png|4540871] - not least the Prague setting, the concept of the individual resisting "modern" developments and the serial killer subplot. This is, therefore, another "Gothic novel of Prague". However, whereas Seven Churches was based in 1990s Prague with mysterious flashbacks/visions of the Middle Ages, "Lord Mord" is squarely set a century before. I don't know about the original Czech version, but the flowing translation by Gerald Turner does not attempt to mimic the flowery language of the period. Rather than through a pastiche of earlier style, the novels of the 19th century are referenced through elements of plot and setting, which replicate common tropes of classic urban Gothic and adventure novels - narrow, foggy streets; drug-fuelled visions; consumptive prostitutes; serial killers sowing terror in the cover of the night; and also some final derring-do worthy of Dumas.
On the whole, I felt that whilst less original and striking than Seven Churches, "Lord Mord" is better crafted and more satisfactory from a purely narrative point of view. No cult novel then, but certainly an assured and entertaining one.
3.5* show less
Přečet jsem to téměř na jeden zátah, ale zas mi to nepřišlo nějak moc inovativní, takové mělké to bylo.
Přijde mi, že Urbanovi obecně celkem jde vytvářet atmosféru prostředí a podivný běh života postav, ale jak se v tom začne přímo Rychle Odehrávat Děj, hůř to najednou drží pohromadě. Kdybych tuhle knížku měl k něčemu staršímu přirovnat, tak je to asi jako kdyby Hastrman neměl dvě výrazně odlišné části (první půlku Hastrmana mám asi za show more nejlepší, co jsem od něj čet), ale jen jednu, stylově někde napůl mezi nima. show less
Přijde mi, že Urbanovi obecně celkem jde vytvářet atmosféru prostředí a podivný běh života postav, ale jak se v tom začne přímo Rychle Odehrávat Děj, hůř to najednou drží pohromadě. Kdybych tuhle knížku měl k něčemu staršímu přirovnat, tak je to asi jako kdyby Hastrman neměl dvě výrazně odlišné části (první půlku Hastrmana mám asi za show more nejlepší, co jsem od něj čet), ale jen jednu, stylově někde napůl mezi nima. show less
Pro mne nejslabbší Urban:-(
Životopis designera Pragovek Bertolda Neumanna, takže je to takový hodně popisný, vyprávěcí a chybí tomu takový ten literární šmrnc. Kdyby mne víc zajímalo téma příběhu (historie počátků automobilismu u nás), tak by mne to určitě bavilo víc, jako libeňačku mne bavily popisy zanikání a vznikání míst (a kdyže se Libeň mění z díry na Rokytce v část Prahy :) )
Životopis designera Pragovek Bertolda Neumanna, takže je to takový hodně popisný, vyprávěcí a chybí tomu takový ten literární šmrnc. Kdyby mne víc zajímalo téma příběhu (historie počátků automobilismu u nás), tak by mne to určitě bavilo víc, jako libeňačku mne bavily popisy zanikání a vznikání míst (a kdyže se Libeň mění z díry na Rokytce v část Prahy :) )
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Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 83
- Popularity
- #218,810
- Rating
- 3.4
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