Physics of Sorrow
«For all Gospodinov’s obsession with sorrow, he is a trickster at heart, and often very funny.»
Garth Greenwell - The New Yorker
Published a decade before his International Booker Prize–winning Time Shelter, Georgi Gospodinov’s The Physics of Sorrow has become an underground cult classic. Finding strange solace in the myth of the Minotaur, a man named Georgi reconstructs the story of his life like a labyrinth, meandering through the past to find the melancholy child at the center of it all. Les mer
Detaljer
- Forlag
- WW Norton & Co
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9781324094890
- Utgivelsesår
- 2024
- Format
- 21 x 14 cm
Om forfatteren
Angela Rodel is a prolific translator of Bulgarian literature and won the International Booker Prize for translation.
Anmeldelser
«For all Gospodinov’s obsession with sorrow, he is a trickster at heart, and often very funny.»
Garth Greenwell - The New Yorker
«There is something of Dostoyevsky’s Underground Man here, furiously attempting to write the world before it’s all swept away... the result is a powerful toast to living.»
Matthew Janney - Financial Times
«Brilliant . . . Elegantly translated by Angela Rodel, The Physics of Sorrow is a fragmented novel that coheres into a remarkable, thought-provoking whole. It is a winding labyrinth through Bulgarian communism, art, literature, history, the personal past, love, sorrow, and so much more.»
Martha Anne Toll - NPR
«The Physics of Sorrow is a novel to get lost in and a desperate struggle to look everywhere — in history, politics, science, myth, literature, and Tamagotchi (really) — to make one’s place in it all make sense.»
Polygon
«In this swirling, ruminative novel, translated by Rodel, award-winning Bulgarian poet, playwright, and novelist Gospodinov takes the mythological minotaur as the central figure in a metafictional narrative that leaps through time and space, from King Minos’ palace to communist Bulgaria, from politics to quantum physics . . . A playful, profound meditation on storytelling and time.»
Kirkus Reviews, starred review
«There are very few novels that appear to a seasoned reader as utterly original: The Physics of Sorrow is one of these rare books.»
Alberto Manguel, author of A History of Reading