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Párhuzamos történetek #3

Parallelle historier: frihedens ändedrag

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Nel terzo e ultimo volume dell’epica europea di Péter Nádas si compongono le trame tessute nei due volumi precedenti: ritroviamo così la famiglia Lippay-Lehr, Gyöngyvér e Ágost, l’ispettore Kienast, la signora Szemzo e tutti i personaggi già apparsi in La regione muta e Nel profondo della notte. A loro si aggiungono figure ispirate a personaggi storici come Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer, medico tedesco che collaborò con Mengele, e la contessa Ilona Edelsheim-Gyulai, nuora di Miklós Horthy, reggente d’Ungheria. L’Europa sull’orlo del conflitto nel 1939, l’assedio di Budapest, la rivoluzione ungherese dell’ottobre 1956, e infine il fatidico 1989: Il respiro della libertà è al contempo un romanzo storico, un’indagine e una testimonianza di come ognuno sia chiamato a costruire il proprio senso di libertà anche quando tutto e tutti sembrano ostacolarla.

750 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2012

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About the author

Péter Nádas

107 books233 followers
Hungarian novelist, essayist, and dramatist, a major central European literary figure. Nádas made his international breakthrough with the monumental novel A Book of Memories (1986), a psychological novel following the tradition of Proust, Thomas Mann, and magic realism.

Péter Nádas was born in Budapest, as the son of a high-ranking party functionary. Nádas's grandfather, Moritz Grünfeld, changed his name into Hungarian, which was considered a scandal in the family. Nádas's youth was shadowed by the loss of his parents. Nádas's mother died of cancer when he was young and his father committed suicide. At the age of 16 his uncle gave him a camera, and after dropping out of school Nádas turned to photojournalism. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, he worked as an editor, reader, and drama consultant. After the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, Nádas quit his job as a journalist and devoted himself to literature. "I resigned, walked out, and turned my back on the system to save my soul," he later said.

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