Auto-da-Fé, Elias Canetti's only work of fiction, is a staggering
achievement that puts him squarely in the ranks of major European
writers such as Robert Musil and Hermann Broch.
It is the story of Peter Kien, a scholarly recluse who lives among and
for his great library. The destruction of Kien through the instrument of
the illiterate, brutish housekeeper he marries constitutes the plot of
the book. The best writers of our time have been concerned with the
horror of the modern world--one thinks of Kafka, to whom Canetti has
often been compared. But Auto-da-Fé stands as a completely original,
unforgettable treatment of the modern predicament.