Skip to main content

Roman eines Schicksallosen

Sort Name
Roman eines Schicksallosen
Type
Novel
Language
German
Ratings
No reviews

Wikipedia

Fateless or Fatelessness (Hungarian: Sorstalanság, lit.'Fatelessness') is a novel by Imre Kertész, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize for literature, written between 1960 and 1973 and first published in 1975.

The novel is a semi-autobiographical story about a 14-year-old Hungarian Jew's experiences in the Auschwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps. The book is the first part of a trilogy, which continues in A kudarc ("Fiasco" ISBN 0-8101-1161-6) and Kaddis a meg nem született gyermekért ("Kaddish for an Unborn Child" ISBN 1-4000-7862-8).

Kertész won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2002, "for writing that upholds the fragile experience of the individual against the barbaric arbitrariness of history".

The book was first translated into English by Christopher C. Wilson and Katharina M. Wilson in 1992 as Fateless (ISBN 0-8101-1049-0 and ISBN 0-8101-1024-5), while in 2004 a second translation by Tim Wilkinson appeared (ISBN 1-4000-7863-6) under the title Fatelessness. In the UK edition, Wilkinson's translation retained the title Fatelessness (ISBN 978-1-784-87215-1).

Continue reading at Wikipedia... Wikipedia content provided under the terms of the Creative Commons BY-SA license

Annotation

New translation first published in 1996.

Title of first translation: Mensch ohne Schicksal.

Last modified: 2020-08-01 (revision #16951)

Editions

NameFormatISBNRelease Date
Roman eines Schicksallosen (Walter Hellmann design)Paperback3-499-22269-81998-06
Roman eines Schicksallosen (Cordula Schmidt design)Paperback3-499-22576-X1999
Add Edition

Identifiers

LibraryThing Work
333083
Wikidata Work ID
Q655701

Related Collections

This entity does not appear in any public collection.
Click the "Add to collection" button below to add it to an existing collection or create a new one.

Reviews No reviews

No reviews yet.


Last Modified
2024-02-11