A rediscovered classic of Hungarian literature, this spellbinding
collection vividly depicts the darkest impulses of the human psyche
against the backdrop of Europe's moral and social decline on the eve of
World War I
Géza Csáth (pen name of Joszef Brenner) was a writer, playwright,
musician, psychiatrist, and physician born in Hungary at the end of the
19th century. One of Sigmund Freud's earliest followers, he pushed both
life and art to radical extremes in an all-consuming--and ultimately
fatal--search for the unvarnished truth about the human condition.
Written with unsparing clarity and reminiscent of the works of Frank
Kafka and Edgar Allan Poe for their dark pessimism and gothic
imagination, the short stories collected here pierce the veil of the
seemingly tranquil, ordinary lives of their protagonist. At times
realistic, at times dreamlike, Csáth's gruesome, harrowing tales reveal
the violent and irrational forces lurking just beneath the surface of a
society on the verge of the abyss.
"A memorable volume, Csáth's depiction of the collapse of Central
Europe, by way of magnification of the collapse of the individual, is
uncannily prophetic."--Joyce Carol Oates, The New Republic