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Cover of Prague Pictures: Portraits of a City

Prague Pictures: Portraits of a City

โœ Scribed by Banville, John


Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Year
2004
Tongue
en-GB
Weight
1 MB
Category
Fiction
ISBN-13
9781582343822

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


From

Here is the latest installment in Bloomsbury's fascinating Writer in the City series, which matches well-known writers with cities with which they are intimately familiar. Banville has not written a guidebook but rather, in his own words, "a handful of recollections, variations on a theme"--snapshots, if you like, of the city's past and present. The book begins with the author's first visit to Prague, during the cold war, but as we go deeper into the book, we also go deeper into the city's history. Banville flicks so effortlessly between past and present that Prague soon appears as a collage, effectively lifting the city's rich and visible past out of time and bringing it to life once again, as the author visits the birthplace of Franz Kafka or steps inside a cathedral whose construction was begun in 1344. While most travel memoirs clearly distinguish between the way a place is today and the way it used to be, Banville's perspective is somewhat different. This, he says, is Prague, past and present, the way it has always been. David Pitt
Copyright ยฉ American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"As remarkable a literary voice as any to come out of Ireland, Joyce and Beckettt notwithstanding." -- ,San Francisco Chronicle,

"Ireland's finest contemporary novelist." -- ,The Economist,

"Mr. Banville is that rare writer who can pack all five senses into one declarattive sentence." -- ,Wall Street Journal,

"What is unusual-defiantly and therefore perhaps gloriously so-about Banville.iss the prose: poetic, sensuous, revelatory." -- ,New York Review of Books,

Praise for John Banville:

"Ireland's finest contemporary novelist."-The Economist

"Mr. Banville is that rare writer who can pack all five senses into one declarative sentence."
-Wall Street Journal

"As remarkable a literary voice as any to come out of Ireland, Joyce and Beckett notwithstanding."-San Francisco Chronicle

"What is unusual-defiantly and therefore perhaps gloriously so-about Banville...is the prose: poetic, sensuous, revelatory."-New York Review of Books
-- Review


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