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Alex Capus

Author of Léon and Louise

36+ Works 1,105 Members 49 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Alex Capus

Image credit: © André Albrecht

Series

Works by Alex Capus

Léon and Louise (2011) 278 copies, 12 reviews
A Matter of Time (2007) 131 copies, 7 reviews
A Price to Pay (2013) 98 copies, 5 reviews
Almost Like Spring (2002) 72 copies, 4 reviews
Life is Good (2016) 50 copies, 3 reviews
Munzinger Pascha: Roman (1997) 47 copies
Königskinder (2018) 44 copies, 3 reviews
Susanna (2022) 35 copies, 3 reviews
Glaubst du, daß es Liebe war? (2005) 31 copies, 1 review
Patriarchen: Zehn Portraits (2006) 27 copies
Mein Studium ferner Welten (2001) 25 copies
Das kleine Haus am Sonnenhang (2024) 24 copies, 2 reviews
13 wahre Geschichten (2004) 23 copies

Associated Works

A Confederacy of Dunces (1980) — Translator, some editions — 21,977 copies, 486 reviews

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Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

I read it in one go basically. There are many short, almost unconnected stories contained in the few days in the life of the storyteller.

A lot of them are really fun, that what makes you keep reading. The least fun are the ones that the storyteller just imagines for himself. Which is weird. Normally real life should not be more absurd than the imagination, but then he IS swiss after all.

What really bugs me about "belletristik" is that at the end, I have no idea what I just read and why.… (more)
 
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cwebb | 2 other reviews | Jul 10, 2023 |
Schön. Unterwasserkloster. Hehe Etwas sarkastisch. Etwas Loriot im Auto.
 
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kakadoo202 | 2 other reviews | Jul 5, 2021 |
I loved the book very much, even if it is hard for me to explain why.

The plot is quite casual, and not always the motives of the characters are clear, but somehow I think this book is exciting and pleasant to read.

There is something about the writing and something about characters that is utterly charming. Even when terrible events described, there is some magic that comes from the way the story told. Also, the characters presented in a way that made me relate them and to their thoughts. Many times when I read novels that take place in a different period, it seems that I don't understand what goes through their mind. In this case, I felt a deep connection.… (more)
 
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JantTommason | 11 other reviews | Jan 7, 2019 |
Max’s wife has taken a job in Paris and she will be gone four of the seven days of the week. Their boys, all teenagers, are generally self-sufficient, so Max, who is an author and also runs a local pub, is left to himself and his own thoughts. We spend those first four days (of his wife’s new job) with Max as he tells us about his wife, his boys, and stories of the pub and its many patrons (quirky and otherwise) and life in general. No matter what he is talking about, there seems to be an underlying love of life itself, and a fondness for all manner of humanity with it being at all saccharine.

I’ve read all of Alex Capus’ fiction that is available in English and, while this novel will not unseat my favorite, which is still [Leon and Louise] , I enjoyed this book immensely. There is something about Capus’s stories—the way he sees people—I thought it might be empathy, and that’s there...but his translator, John Brownjohn,puts it this way: "…I think ‘humanity’ is a keyword in Capus’ writing. He always gives one a sympathetic insight into the essential humanity of his characters, from the homesick German shipbuilders in [A Matter of Time] to the young lovers in [Léon and Louise] to the youthful bank robbers in [Almost Like Spring] or the three protagonists in his latest novel [A Price to Pay] …."

Translating Alex Capus: An Interview with John Brownjohn by Daniel Hahn
… (more)
 
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avaland | 2 other reviews | Jul 6, 2018 |

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John Brownjohn Translator

Statistics

Works
36
Also by
1
Members
1,105
Popularity
#23,258
Rating
3.9
Reviews
49
ISBNs
140
Languages
10
Favorited
4

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