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Short Story Collections (Single Author), European Fiction - General
Bacacay by Witold Gombrowicz — book cover

Bacacay

by Witold Gombrowicz, Bill Johnston
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Overview

“These exuberant stories, so startlingly fresh, so vigorous, and so wildly inventive, are a delight…”—Alastair Reid

“Gombrowicz is one of the most original and gifted writers of the twentieth century: he belongs at the very summit, at the side of his kindred spirits, Kafka and Céline.”—Louis Begley

“One of the greatest novelists of our century.”—Milan Kundera

Stunningly original in both style and content, these stories are hilarious yet have an undercurrent of profound moral disquiet and horror when the respectable turns slowly but inexorably into the outrageous, conveying both the horrors of upper-class life and the deepest anguish of the human condition.

Synopsis

Hilarious, disturbing, brilliantly written tales of erotic lepers, duped aristocrats, and the bizarre universe of Witold Gombrowicz.

Library Journal

Best known for his novels (Ferdydurke) and plays (Princess Ivona), Gombrowicz (1904-69) was also a deft short story writer. This collection was first published in his native Poland in 1957 and appears here in English for the first time. The stories are at once humorous, surreal, and absurd. In "A Premeditated Crime," the narrator discovers the head of household dead and with no physical evidence decides that the death was murder and pushes the family to a startling breaking point. "Dinner at Countess Parahoke's" recounts one of the countess's vegetarian suppers, where the cauliflower may not be what it seems. In "Philidor's Child Within," two academic adversaries carry their studies too far when their duel leads to the death of one's wife and the other's lover. A town bully is captured and tortured with a rat for over a decade in "A Rat." The characters and plots are unsettling enough to make it difficult to shake the stories off after reading them; however, their pacing and dated topics make large public demand unlikely. Recommended for academic collections.-Heather Wright, ASRC Aerospace Corp., Cincinnati Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Witold Gombrowicz

Witold Gombrowicz (1904-1969), the single most important Polish prose writer of the 20th century, spent much of his life in France and Argentina (Bacacay was the street he lived on in Buenos Aires). His novels include Ferdydurke, Trans-Atlantyk, Cosmos, and Pornografia. Awarded the Prix Formentor (1967). Johnston is Director of the Polish Studies Center at Indiana University. His translations include Gustaw Herling's The Noonday Cemetery and Other Stories (New Directions, 2003), Jerzy Pilch's His Current Woman (Grove, 2002), and Stefan Zeromski's The Faithful River (Northwestern, 1999). In 2005, he won an ASTEEL translation prize for Tulli's Dreams and Stones.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Best known for his novels (Ferdydurke) and plays (Princess Ivona), Gombrowicz (1904-69) was also a deft short story writer. This collection was first published in his native Poland in 1957 and appears here in English for the first time. The stories are at once humorous, surreal, and absurd. In "A Premeditated Crime," the narrator discovers the head of household dead and with no physical evidence decides that the death was murder and pushes the family to a startling breaking point. "Dinner at Countess Parahoke's" recounts one of the countess's vegetarian suppers, where the cauliflower may not be what it seems. In "Philidor's Child Within," two academic adversaries carry their studies too far when their duel leads to the death of one's wife and the other's lover. A town bully is captured and tortured with a rat for over a decade in "A Rat." The characters and plots are unsettling enough to make it difficult to shake the stories off after reading them; however, their pacing and dated topics make large public demand unlikely. Recommended for academic collections.-Heather Wright, ASRC Aerospace Corp., Cincinnati Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Conformity and logical coherence are rudely deranged in a dozen early tales from Poland's urbane misanthrope (1904-69). As in Gombrowicz's airily bizarre novels (Ferdydurke, Cosmos, Pornografia, etc.), lucid, concise narratives are weighted with outrageous premises and absurd developments that recall the work of Kafka, Beckett, Bruno Schulz, and (especially) Ionesco. Everything challenges the reader's expectations. A peevish recluse becomes the infatuated stalker of a stranger who reproves his boorishness ("Lawyer Kraykowski's Daner"). The son of a Gentile father and Jewish mother experiences "moral ruination" as a consequence of his parents' incompatibility ("The Memoirs of Stefan Czarniecki"). An aging civil servant courts unlovely housemaids, protesting his life of stifling respectability ("On the Kitchen Steps"). Ministers rebel inefficiently against a willfully mad monarch ("The Banquet"). And a delicious stew ostensibly featuring a murdered child's flesh is served to jaded aristocrats in the cheerfully mordant "Dinner at Countess Pavahoke's."Johnston's brilliant translations vividly convey the radically unconventional content and style of one of the strangest-and greatest-of writers.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2006
Publisher
Archipelago Books
Pages
275
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780976395072

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