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The
2011 Award |
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The Ninth by Ferenc Barnás Translated from the original Hungarian by Paul Olchváry
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Nominated by:
Publisher of Nominated Edition:
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| the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors |
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ABOUT
THE BOOK |
Set in a sleepy village north of Budapest in 1968, this touching, unsettling novel paints a richly wrought portrait of mid-twentieth-century Hungary. The narrator is the ninth child of a family distinguished by its size, poverty, faith, and abundance of physical and psychological disabilities. His confusion is exacerbated by the strict, secretive Catholic household his parents keep in the face of a Communist system. These dual oppressions propel him toward an inevitable realization of his guilt and desire that speaks to his struggle with a fateful, seamless beauty. (From Publisher). |
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ABOUT
THE AUTHOR |
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Ferenc Barnás (b.1959) is an acclaimed Hungarian novelist whose books include The Parasite and Bagatell. He is the recipient of two of Hungary’s highest literary honors: the Sándor Márai Prize (2001) and the Tibor Déry Prize (2006). |
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LIBRARIANS' COMMENTS |
This novel deals with life under the soft Communist rule of the late 1960s, but from the point of view of a child with no basis for comparison. The picture we gain from our young narrator is uncomplicated by subtlety, policics, morality and without the self conscious morbidity and sexuality found in so many adult narrators. |
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