OF KIDS & PARENTS, Emil Hakl

OF KIDS & PARENTS

Emil Hakl

Publisher: Twisted Spoon Press
PubDate: 9/1/2008
ISBN: 9788086264301
Binding: PAPERBACK
Price: $14.50
Quantity Available: 13
Pages: 154
 

Fiction. Translated from the Czech by Marek Tomin. In Europe, taking a walk is a cultural phenomenon having an almost mystical import. It connects physical activity with meditation, inner silence with the outer tumult of the world. Taking its cue both from Joyce's Ulysses and Hrabal's freely associating stream of anecdote, OF KIDS & PARENTS is about a father and son taking a walk through Prague, over the course of which, and in the pubs and bars they stop into, their personal lives are revealed as entwined with the past sixty years of upheaval in their corner of Europe. One's "small history" is shown to be inseparable from the large history played out on the world's stage: families are uprooted, relationships fail, jobs are gained or lost, and still life goes on. Hakl's genius is his ability to mesh the two into a seamless flow of dialogue. The father tells his son: "Nothing's been new in this world for more than two billion years, it's all just variations on the same theme of carbon, hydrogen, helium, and nitrogen." Which raises the question: though Prague has witnessed various forms of government, wars, putsches, and revolutions come and go over the course of a century, what really has changed? On the personal level, the same mistakes are repeated over and over, a never-ending freak show. Currently being translated into most European languages, the novel was awarded a Magnesia Litera Book of the Year prize in 2003 and has been made into a recently released feature film.

The fiction writer and poet Emil Hakl (real name Jan Benes) was born in Prague on 25 March 1958. He graduated from the Jaroslav Jezek Conservatory, and then did a number of menial jobs. In the 1990s he was a copywriter for an advertising agency, and in 2001 an editor on the literary journal Tvar. In the late 1980s he co-founded 'Moderní analfabet' (The Modern Illiterate), an informal literary association, and later collaborated with the 'Pant Klub' (Hinge Club) and the 'Literární a kulturní Klub 8' (The Literary and Culture Club 8). He lives in Prague.

Reviews and Other Links
http://blog.salonicaworldlit.com/2009/08/09/juniper-brandies-with-my-dad.aspx
http://www.newpages.com/bookreviews/bookreview_archive_2008/2008_10/october2008_book_reviews.htm#kids
http://www.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent/index.php?id=1370


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