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A House in Istria, by Richard Swartz Translated from the Swedish by Anna Paterson |
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| A wild and quixotic novel about real estate, marriage, and obsession. "The novel consists mostly of absurdist digressions that call to mind Beckett, Kafka, or even Monty Python." --The Seattle Times A House in Istria is a crazily comic novel about a man, his long-suffering wife, and his fixation with buying the abandoned house next door. But, in this Croatian region of Istria, the neighbors frown upon the husband as a Westerner who knows nothing about Balkan history or the area's deep blood feuds. "Forget that house," they tell him: "It's not for sale." "A Western European man living in Croatia becomes obsessed with an abandoned house in A House in Istria, Swedish novelist Richard Swartz's surreal, comic romp through Eastern Bloc history. Narrated by the unnamed man's long-suffering wife, the book follows the couple as they try to figure out who owns the house so that they can buy it. With his wife patiently translating, the man harasses everyone from their neighbor Dmitrij, who cultivates mushrooms, to local lawyer Franjo, to an Italian family in nearby Trieste. As the story unwinds, we learn that the house was occupied by Jews, then fascists, then communists, all of whom are now busy suing for the house." --Publishers Weekly Date of publication: June 2007 |
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©2008 by New Directions
Publishing Corp. |
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