Captives
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A stunning novel set in postwar Romania about language, identity, and loss.
Captives, the acclaimed writer Norman Manea's first novel, is a fascinating, kaleidoscopic, and imaginative look into postwar Romania. Divided into three sections–narrated in first-, second-, and third-person voices–Captives explores the lives of several defeated characters as they become almost too much to bear under the weight of endless humiliations: loss of identity, trauma of having survived the Second World War, and submission to the totalitarian state.
This is a moving account of a country shaken by communism and anti-Semitism and haunted by recent atrocities, from "a distinguished writer whose vision of totalitarianism is close to Kafka's cloudy menace, universal yet internalized" (Richard Eder, The New York Times).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this bold novel, Manea (The Hooligan's Return) explores a population "imprisoned by the ravaged waters of impossible forgetting" in the aftermath of World War II, trying to make sense of what it means to have survived. An unnamed office worker cannot forget about a lonely piano teacher, Monica Sm nta nescu. He can't forget about the apparent suicide of fellow comrade, Captain Bogdan Zubcu, or the Captain's orphaned daughter. As these reflections mix with recollections from his youth in Stalinist Romania, the office worker's instability rises to the surface. Translator Jean Harris describes the book's structure as, "The semi-therapeutic writing of a madman." As the narrator wanders around, trying to make sense of his existence, the plot is uncovered in a succession of memories between 1947 and 1965 often these moments are told out of order, scenes flow into each other and perspectives swirl together using first-, second, and third-person perspectives. Many scenes are revisited and reimagined, and every retelling provides more lucid descriptions. As the narrator repeats, again and again, an outburst to his superior at the office or recalls the recurring image of hands on throats, each occasion carries new and greater meaning. A masterful work.