Chronicle In Stone (Canons)

Chronicle In Stone (Canons)

by David Bellos (Afterword), David Bellos (Translator), David Bellos (Editor), David Bellos (Translator), David Bellos (Editor), David Bellos (Afterword), Arshi Pipa (Translator), Ismail Kadare (Author), James Wood (Introduction)

Synopsis

In a seamless mosaic of dreams and games, a young boy reflects on events as his hometown in Albania falls to a series of invaders. Amid floods and bombings, his own innocence and wonder are lost forever in the madness and brutality of the Second World War. A disturbing mix of tragedy and comedy, politics and sexuality, Chronicle in Stone is a fascinating masterpiece about what it means to grow up in a turbulent world.

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20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: Main - Canons
Publisher: Canongate Canons
Published: 06 Dec 2018

ISBN 10: 1786894491
ISBN 13: 9781786894496

Media Reviews
A great novel . . . A joyful, often comic piece of work -- James Wood * * New Yorker * *
Sophisticated and accomplished in its poetic prose and narrative deftness -- John Updike * * New Yorker * *
A master storyteller -- JOHN CAREY
Ismail Kadare has sometimes been compared with Kafka, and you can see why * * Mail on Sunday * *
There are very few writers alive today with the depth, power and resonance of this remarkable novelist * * Herald * *
Chronicle in Stone is stunning, the quintessential tale of war seen through a child's eyes -- Susan Salter Reynolds * * Los Angeles Times * *
Writing like this is hard to stop quoting . . . It is musical not only in rhythms that survive in this deft . . . translation but in its most elemental perceptions -- Evan Eisenberg * * The Nation * *
[Albania's] most remarkable export: the novels of Ismail Kadare -- Ken Kalfus * * The Village Voice Literary Supplement * *
Chronicle in Stone is epic in its simplicity; the history of a young Albanian and a primitive Albania awakening into the modern world -- Michael Dregni * * Minneapolis Star Tribune * *
Author Bio
Ismail Kadare was born in 1936 in Gjirokaster, in the south of Albania. He studied in Tirana and Moscow, returning to Albania in 1960 after the country broke ties with the Soviet Union. Translations of his novels have since been published in more than forty countries, and in 2005 he became the first winner of the Man Booker International Prize. David Bellos, Director of the Program in Translation at Princeton University, is also the translator of Georges Perec's Life A User's Manual and a winner of the Goncourt Prize for biography. He has translated seven of Ismail Kadare's novels, and in 2005 was awarded the Man Booker International Prize for his translations of Kadare's work.