Report From A Parisian Paradise: Essays From France 1925-1939
by Joseph Roth 2021-01-07 14:50:41
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The wisdom of a lost generation distilled in a bottle of Calvados.At one time an underground hero in the world of journalism, with prose on a par with Tolstoy and Kafka, Joseph Roth now looms large in the pantheon of European literature. Indeed, the... Read more
The wisdom of a lost generation distilled in a bottle of Calvados.

At one time an underground hero in the world of journalism, with prose on a par with Tolstoy and Kafka, Joseph Roth now looms large in the pantheon of European literature. Indeed, the last five years have seen a major Roth revival culminating in Report from a Parisian Paradise, a haunting epitaph by the greatest foreign correspondent of his age. An exile in Paris, Roth captured the essence of France in the 1920s and 1930s. From the port town of Marseille to the erotic hill country around Avignon, Report from a Parisian Paradise—superbly translated by Michael Hofmann—paints the sepia-tinted landscapes, enchanting people, and ruthless desperation of a country hurtling toward dissolution. Roth''s book is not only a paean to a European order that could no longer hold but also a miraculous and revelatory work of transcendent philosophical clarity. Less
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  • Print pages
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  • 8.25 X 5.5 X 0.8 in
  • 304
  • WW Norton
  • August 30, 2005
  • English
  • 9780393327168
Author
Joseph Roth, born Moses Joseph Roth (2 Sep 1894 – 27 May 1939), was an Austrian journalist and novelist, best known for his family saga Radetzky March (1932), about the decline and fall of the Austr...
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