The New York Press takes a look at Liquidation, the latest novel from Nobel Laureate Imre Kertesz. (It's high, high, high up on our TBR pile, and we hope to have our own marginally coherent thoughts on it here before the new year.)
And now we have Liquidation to ponder, Kertesz's most textured and indirect address to the future of European sensibility through an examination of its private past. Liquidation opens after the fall of the Iron Curtain, and gives us Kingbitter, a well-meaning editor at a Hungarian publishing house now failing with the pressures of privatization. Kingbitter's mirror-image—almost the other, more eastern, half of Europe—is Kertesz's double as well, a Holocaust survivor and writer named B. who killed himself 10 years prior, in 1990, with an overdose of heroin. Kingbitter has in his hands a play—titled the same as the book in one of the most deft, and psychologically adept, attempts at metafiction in print—a play that seems to recreate, or reproduce, the dialogue among B.'s friends that followed his suicide.
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