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Loading... Harlequin's Millions: a fairy tale (1981)by Bohumil Hrabal
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"By the writer whom Milan Kundera called Czechoslovakia's greatest contemporary writer comes a novel (now in English for the first time) peopled with eccentric, unforgettable inhabitants of a home for the elderly who reminisce about their lives and their changing country. Written with a keen eye for the absurd and sprinkled with dialogue that captures the poignancy of the everyday, this novel allows us into the mind of an elderly woman coming to terms with the passing of time. -- No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)891.8Literature Other literatures East Indo-European and Celtic literatures West and South Slavic languages (Bulgarian, Slovene, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Serbo-Croatian, and Macedonian)LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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". . . Some of the men, a few dozen of them, have the habit of removing their teeth at the last moment, they do this so inconspicuously, they try so hard to be inconspicuous that almost all of them drop the dentures, which hit the parquet floor with a loud crash, the men lean over to one side, feel around guiltily for their teeth and wrap them in a handkerchief, and then the embarrassed and blushing pensioner tucks his false teeth, handkerchief and all, into his pants' pocket, while dozens of others are taking their teeth out of their pants' pockets and putting them back in their mouths, so that lunchtime is filled with the tinkling of spoons, knives, forks and the clattering of bowls and false teeth. . . And once again everyone gobbles down their food, as it it's a contest, or as if the battle between the Greeks and the Persians [depicted on the fresco billowing overhead] has spread to the hall below, only instead of swords and lances and shields the diners use spoons and knives, forks and napkins. . ."
Micro-events, such as the old men's daily struggle with their dentures, or an evening of music selected by a young doctor, are transformed, through the detailed descriptions and the choice of the vocabulary, and the story-teller's power of fascination, into events of mythical proportions: the dining hall activity mirrors the battle painted on the ceiling, and old women listening to music turn into lovesick nymphs. At the same time, History with capital H, the history of changing political regimes, the destruction of the old by the new, are dwarfed by the grandeur of everyday human gestures. ( )