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The Silent Prophet by Joseph Roth — book cover

The Silent Prophet

by Joseph Roth
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Overview

Because he is born illegitimate, Friederich Kargan lacks even a social identity. Moving to Vienna, he becomes involved both in revolutionary agitation and a love affair before he is caught by the authorities on his first trip to Russia, enduring a Siberian interlude before escaping. He eventually returns to Russia after the February Revolution, becoming leader of the Red Army, but realizes during the civil war that the revolution seems to be over before it has begun; the cause has been betrayed, yesterday’s proletariat has become today’s bourgeoisie; exile might offer the only choice. A beautifully descriptive journey from loneliness into an illusory worldliness and back into loneliness, this is a haunting study in alienation by a master of realistic imagination.

Synopsis

The Silent Prophet is a vivid attempt to explain the Russian Revolution and its betrayal by exposing the personal motivations of its leaders. It focuses on the power struggle between the illegitimate and rootless Friedrich Kargan (based on Trotsky) and the coldly amoral Savelli (Stalin) to form a brilliant portrayal of revolutionary idealism-turned-cynicism.

Library Journal

Released in his native Italian in 1950 and in English in 1952, Pavese's novel is an Italian "you can't go home again." Our narrator returns to the small village where he was reared after 20 years in America to find that while its physical beauty remains intact, the people and the personality of the village have changed forever. Roth's The Silent Prophet (1966 in German, 1979 in English) also offers characters who have lost their past and are exiles in their own lands. In this case it is Friederich Kargan, who is searching for a home in post-World War I Europe. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Joseph Roth

Joseph Roth is the author of The Legend of the Holy Drinker, The Radetzky March, and String of Pearls.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Released in his native Italian in 1950 and in English in 1952, Pavese's novel is an Italian "you can't go home again." Our narrator returns to the small village where he was reared after 20 years in America to find that while its physical beauty remains intact, the people and the personality of the village have changed forever. Roth's The Silent Prophet (1966 in German, 1979 in English) also offers characters who have lost their past and are exiles in their own lands. In this case it is Friederich Kargan, who is searching for a home in post-World War I Europe. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2003
Publisher
Overlook Press, The
Pages
220
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781585674213

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