Bővebb ismertető
Introduction
It is a considerable achievement to have turned yourself into a literary cult, to have your name associated not only with particular districts of your capital city but with an entire mode of feeling. In Hungary, the terms 'Krúdyesque' and 'the world of Krúdy' have a currency which extends beyond books and conjures an experience comprised of the nostalgic, the fantastic and the ironic. It is even more remarkable that this experience should be conveyed in a literary style that anticipates both 'stream of consciousness' modernism and the magic realism of contemporary Latin American writers. Krúdy' s work, in other words, is both of its time and outside it. It encapsulates a passing world of manners but turns it into illusion and establishes that illusion as a form of sensibility. In so doing it accomplishes a quiet revolution that opens the possibilities of narrative without ever appearing unnatural.
Gyula Krúdy was bom in 1878, in Nyíregyháza, one of the bigger towns in eastern Hungary at the foot of the Carpathian mountains. The name of the town suggests birches {nyír means birch) and the whole area is known as the birch country. Krúdy's family was Catholic, and his father, a lawyer, was a member of the local minor
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