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Árpád Göncz (1922–2015)

Author of Homecoming and Other Stories

19+ Works 42 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Árpád Göncz

Associated Works

The Fellowship of the Ring (1954) — Translator, some editions — 63,445 copies, 568 reviews
Frankenstein (1818) — Translator, some editions — 50,763 copies, 812 reviews
The Thorn Birds (1977) — Translator, some editions — 8,346 copies, 160 reviews
The Fountains of Paradise (1979) — Translator, some editions — 3,870 copies, 60 reviews
Farmer Giles of Ham (1949) — Translator, some editions — 2,130 copies, 27 reviews
Falconer (1977) — Translator, some editions — 1,529 copies, 23 reviews

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Reviews

2 reviews
Az első három szöveget annyira nem szerettem, hogy hónapokra félre is tettem a könyvet, és nemrég még azon gondolkoztam, hagyjam-e a fenébe, vagy olvassam tovább. Ezúton is nagyon köszönöm az 'adjak még egy esélyt neki' tanácsot, onnantól imádtam.

Azt hiszem, az a különbség, hogy a negyediktől kezd szétesni, töredékessé válni a szöveg, de bevallom, nem tudtam rávenni magam, hogy újraolvassam az első hármat. Mindenesetre jólesik a bizalom felém mint olvasó show more felé, hogy lehet nekem nem kerek egész mondatokban gondolkozást, elharapott szavakat, mondatokat adni, ilyen mesterien mindenképp, érteni fogom.

Az 1944 című pár sorokban olyan erős, hogy a fal adja a másikat. Az utolsó, kicsit hosszabb lélegzetvételű novellától tartottam, hogy megint túl "rendes" szöveg lesz, túl megfogalmazott, de óriási játék volt, nagyon élveztem.
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Collection of short stories by the other writer to elected to President in the former Eastern Bloc: in this case, Hungary.

One of the issues with reading literature from totalitarian states is that we are always reading beyond the text, searching for hidden meanings and covert criticism, that we ignore what is front of our eyes. This probably works in Goncz favour for many of the stories (i.e., 'Balance' or 'Power')in this collection are so run-of-the-mill, so predictable that they feel like show more a 100 stories we have read before. Perhaps it is the predictably that was the criticism of the regime - 'look even our stories are banal now'.

Add in the one-two page 'fables' which fail to excite, this collection stands on the strength of three stories - 'The Front', 'Old People', and Encounter.

'The Front' concerns an old lady living alone who is visited by two Russian soldiers; the younger one returning later to rape her. She fends him off and then feeds him - he is so like her soldier son - they come to a mutual understanding. This could be read as an allegory of Hungary (the old woman) or it could just be a story set in war that tells us we are all "God's children". Despite the cliched aspects of this story it has stuck in my mind.

'Old People' sounds like it could be a black comedy - a committee is awarding a plaque to a writer who has dementia, i.e., the great writer deprived of words and so cannot resist the award the state wants to give, and he doesn't want to receive. In reality, the story focuses on the writer's wife and her chores - cleaning him, making the house tidy, etc. There is a Chekhovian feel to this story - the despair, the suffering, etc - but it fails to move beyond the furniture to philosophy as happens in Chekhov.

The last, and longest, story in the collection is 'Encounter'. It is also the best story by far. In France, a bishop travelling to Rome to vote on the canonisation of Joan of Arc is left stranded when his car breaks down. The only place to seek refuge is a lonely farmhouse owned by a young woman. Soon we realise that the woman is Joan and the bishop, Cauchon, the magistrate who condemned her to burn centuries ago. Other characters from the past appear as the two protagnonists discuss aspects of the trial, religion, history. Goncz made his name as playwright and it shows here (it also has elements of Marai in it's construction) - characters sit and talk but this story transcends it's limitations in a manner the other stories fail to. It is the one time when reading this collection that there really is something beyond the text.

Hard to recommend fully but it is short, and Encounter is definitely worth reading. (
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Works
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Rating
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Reviews
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ISBNs
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