The End of the World Might Not Have Taken Place bookcover

The End of the World Might Not Have Taken Place

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Description

The end of the world is the least of the problems facing Gaspard Boisvert, erstwhile advisor to "the stupidest American president in history," when he discovers that he may share the genes of a certain, infamous Austrian corporal, thanks to a dalliance on the part of his grandmother during the First World War.

Around the hapless Gaspard's descent into amnesia and anti-social rebellion, an obsessive-compulsive narrator assembles 111 pithy chapters linked by the ultimate theme of all: the coming apocalypse. In this deadpan anti-novel, statistics and historical data are marshalled, and the divagations range over subjects as various as the history of religions, Viagra, vegetarianism and dietary taboos, aerial bombing, the Maltese national anthem, categories of suicide, varieties of stupidity, bathtubs, the critical density of the universe, pork and pigmen, and the etymology of the name Adolf.

Product Details

PublisherDalkey Archive Press
Publish DateFebruary 18, 2020
Pages176
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781628973396
Dimensions8.4 X 5.3 X 0.6 inches | 0.6 pounds

About the Author

Patrik Ouředník was born in Prague, but emigrated to France in 1984, where he still lives. He is the author of nineteen books, including fiction, essays, and poems. He is also the Czech translator of novels, short stories and plays from such writers as François Rabelais, Alfred Jarry, Raymond Queneau, Samuel Beckett, and Boris Vian. He has received a number of literary awards for his writing, including the Czech Literary Fund Award.
Alexander Hertich is a translator and professor of French literature. His translations have appeared in Dalkey Archive Press's Best European Fiction 2015, 2016, and 2019.

Reviews

"And this is where the novel hits the mark, reminding us that passivity will always give power to the strongest and that by dint of hunching over, we may end up not knowing what it is to be standing." ― ActuaLitté

-- "ActuaLitté"

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