Hungarian List

Postcard from London: And Other Stories

Ivan Mandy, John Batki

List price £20.99

Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9780857428868
Published:
15 Sep 2021
Publisher:
Seagull Books London Ltd
Dimensions:
356 pages - 229 x 152mm
Availability:
Available
Series:
Hungarian List

Iván Mándy (1918–1995) has been called “the prose poet of Budapest,” and this volume of short stories presents the first comprehensive collection of his work in English. His early oeuvre created an urban mythology full of picaresque characters inhabiting the seedier neighborhoods of the city: its flea-market stalls, second-run cinemas, and old-fashioned coffeehouses. The stories from the later decades of Mándy’s life, often bordering on the absurd, introduce many autobiographical elements spun around the author’s alter-ego, János Zsámboky, whose hapless adventures on a rare trip abroad constitute this group of stories, including “Postcard from London.” Mándy’s unique style at times borrows techniques from films and radio plays, his quirky cuts creating a flicker of images seen in the mind’s eye. Memory and perception, time and place spin in narrative legerdemain that invites and rewards the reader’s active participation.
The first comprehensive volume in English from one of Hungary’s most popular twentieth-century writers. 
Abandoned Afternoon Sleeper Autobiography Cabana Mosquitoes A Character out of Chekhov A Corner of the Table The Day of Glory A Dream Fabulya’s Wives Furniture at Night God A Grand Old Cafe In a Drafty Staircase In Place of a Foreword Marlene Dietrich Message The Morning of the Journey The Night Before the Journey On a Streetcar The Original Ottlik Pebble Postcard from London Snotty Ghost The Sweet Smell of Success A Vestibule The Veteran A Visit with Father A Visit with Mother A Wedding What Was Left Women’s Locker Room Words About an Uncle
Ivan Mandy (1918-1995) was one of the most widely read Hungarian writers of the postwar period. He was coeditor of the independent literary review Ujhold until its suppression in 1948. John Batki, born in Hungary, has lived in the United States since age fourteen. His numerous translations from Hungarian literature include works by Laszlo Krasznahorkai and Gyula Krudy.
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