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The Curtain: An Essay in Seven Parts
 
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The Curtain: An Essay in Seven Parts (Hardcover)

by Milan Kundera (Author), Linda Asher (Translator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. It's not often that a work comes along that so perfectly distills an approach to art that it realigns the way an art form is understood. Susan Sontag's revolutionary work On Photography was one such piece. Kundera's new book-length essay should be another. The renowned Franco-Czech author (The Book of Laughter and Forgetting) investigates the history of the novel, beginning with the moment in which Cervantes denied Don Quixote's desire for elevation to knight-errant and instead "cast a legendary figure down: into the world of prose." In the prosaic world, according to Kundera, the absence of pathos, the insistence on the comedic and the interrelation of all novels represent the locus of meaning and emotional impact. Kundera argues against the tendency to classify and study literature through the lens of nationality. Instead, he proposes a world literature that would take into account the way novelists learn from one another, Sterne from Rabelais, Fielding from Cervantes, Joyce from Flaubert and, though he never explicitly states it, Kundera from them all. This is a self-consciously personal vision of "the poetics of the novel," one that displays Kundera's own preoccupations, from his Central European dislike of sentimental kitsch to his exhortation that, to be counted in the history of the novel, all novelists must follow Cervantes, must "[tear] the curtain of preinterpretation" into which we are all born. Only then can the novel accomplish its purpose: to show its readers their own lives. (Feb.)
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Review

"Lovely, meandering observations on the genre to which he has consecrated his life.Like good love stories, it pulls you in." (Philadelphia Inquirer )

"Kundera's essay so perfectly distilles an approach to art that it realigns the way an art form is understood." (Publishers Weekly (starred review) )

"Bursting at the seams with ideas.Kundera dashes irrepressibly around his own studio...to consistently fascinating effect. A rare pleasure." (Steven Poole, New Statesman )

"Kundera offers witty and edifying improvisations on.favorite themes.Anyone interested in the novel will delight in this book." (Alec Solomita, New York Sun )

"Kundera.argues brilliantly.Discarding chronology, Kundera lets us witness the inner workings of his....wonderful reader's mind." (Cecile Alduy, San Francisco Chronicle )

"A swiftly told, beautifully crafted, pleasurable...scrutiny of the novel ...To Mr. Kundera, the novel is a liberating force." (The Economist )

"A work of sophisticated literary cartography.agreeably studded with insights." (Joseph Epstein, Wall Street Journal )

"As the French expression goes, Kundera always gives you furiously to think.[He] writes.with passion." (Michael Dirda, Washington Post Book World )

"An elegant, personalized integration of anecdote, analysis, scholarship, memory and speculation...Kundera's opinions...are well worth listening to." (Russell Banks, New York Times Book Review )

"Essential reading in a long history of debates about the genre...Wise, deep, and witty." (New York Review of Books )

"Well-worth reading.witty and brisk and very smart, like all of [Kundera's] writing." (William Deresiewicz, The Nation )

"Evocative...Kundera marvelously conducts us on a journey through the history of the novel." (Library Journal )

"Kundera is assuredly one of the great living writers.This is a remarkable book..Absorbing and sometimes sublime." (Buffalo News )

"Brilliant, vehement, learned and wise.Stimulating and provocative.THE CURTAIN raises essential questions." (Salon.com )

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4.0 out of 5 stars Draw back the curtain, Mar 13 2007
There are moments of beauty, of magic. A ramble through the art of the novel and the life of Kundera. Not as focused as Smiley's 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel, not as deep as Shklovsky's Theory of Prose. Consider it a light read that emphasizes the momentary and the incidental -- each filled with psychological depth, at least according to Kundera. This would be a supplement, consider it the second level bookshelf for advanced writers and readers.
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