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The Joke - Milan Kundera

Brand: Harper Perennial   |   Status: Còn hàng
360.000₫

"I believe this to be a much more brilliant novel by Kundera than his more famous The Unbearable Lightness of Being, which to me seems all the more impressive considering it was his first book. The author has a fantastic ability to pull the story together from the different perspectives of the characters, and the story takes a more mature direction instead of becoming too ironic. Throughout the book I’m reminded of the silliness of youth and of strong, puritanical views of the world, political views of naive people with “good intentions” and lofty ideals, eager to sacrifice the world for their newfound solutions." - Amazon Customer Reviews

The authoritative version of the brilliant first novel by the author of The Unbearable Lightness of Being. A great novel of thwarted love and revenge miscarried, in a completely revised translation that is nothing less than the restoration of a classic.

In this new English-language version of Kundera's classic first novel, completely revised by the author to incorporate the most accurate portions of two previous translations plus his own corrections, the narrator Ludvik wonders, "What if History plays jokes?" This politically charged question, coupled with Ludvik's fate as an unintentional dissident, struck a chord in Czech readers; the novel's 1967 publication was a key literary event of the Prague Spring. Looking back on the tense, McCarthy-like atmosphere of the late 1940s, it chronicles the disastrous results of Ludvik's prankish postcard to a girlfriend criticizing the Czech communist regime. He is expelled from the Communist Party, forced to leave the university and join a special army unit with other enemies of the state. Years later, after he has resumed his studies and become a successful scientist, his lingering anger at the man who engineered his expulsion culminates in an act of destructive sexual revenge that serves only to show Ludvik he has never really understood any woman and is indeed the butt of one of history's many cruel jokes. The fresh descriptions and masterful employment of several narrators testify to Kundera's power as a novelist, unmistakable even in this early work.