Detective Story by Imre Kertész, Tim Wilkinson (Translator)

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: March 2009
  • 128pp
  • Sales Rank: 435,670
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2009
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 128pp
    • Sales Rank: 435,670

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    Imre Kertész, the Hungarian-born novelist and Nobel laureate, offers a slim, dark, and haunting novella about crime and punishment in a totalitarian state. At 112 pages, it's light enough to be consumed in a sitting. Its aftermath may linger a lot longer. Detective Story is actually the story of a detective who finds himself in jail for his participation in the execution of two prominent citizens. The corrupt government for which he has executed them has been overthrown and a new one installed. Now it's the detective's turn to be condemned. While he waits in jail, he writes out the story of events leading up to the killing, delving into the murdered boy's diary, which he has kept. We get glimpses of the machinations of the system around him, but there is a great deal left deliberately vague: the detective describes and explores the boy's fascinating, troubled spirit but leaves much of the state of terror encompassing them both to our inference. The whole novella nominally takes place in an unnamed Central or South American country, and the surnames are vaguely Spanish. But the blurred setting -- we might be in any troubled country undergoing upheaval -- lends the story considerable darkness and makes its meditations on moral ambiguity seem universally applicable. There's an old adage: Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. But what about mere embeddedness? What is the power -- or the responsibility -- of the cog in the wheel? The detective doesn't plead his innocence. But as he waits for his own execution, the questions of justice that hang in the balance are the ones that beg to be unraveled. --Tess Taylor

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    Synopsis

    From Nobel Laureate Imre Kertész comes this riveting novel about a torturer for the secret police of a Latin American regime who tells the haunting story of the father and son he ensnared and destroyed.

    Now in prison, Antonio Martens is a torturer for a recently defunct dictatorship. He requests and is given writing materials in his cell, using them to narrate his involvement in the torture and assassination of a wealthy and prominent man and his son whose principled but passive opposition to the regime left them vulnerable to the secret police. Inside Martens's mind, we inhabit the rationalizing world of evil and see firsthand the inherent danger of inertia during times of crisis. A slim, explosive novel of justice railroaded by malevolence, Detective Story is a warning cry for our time.

    Publishers Weekly

    At the start of this subtle look at the price of the war on terror from Hungarian author Kertész (Liquidation), Antonio Martens, a policeman in an unnamed Latin American country, awaits trial for multiple counts of murder after the regime that employed him was toppled. Martens tells how he was transferred from the criminal investigative branch of the police to the Corps, a security unit, where, unfettered by any meaningful restraints, he pursued the case of Federigo and Enrique Salinas, a father and son who operated the country's leading department store chain and were suspected of plotting treason. Kertész, who won the 2002 Nobel Prize for Literature, charts Martens's incremental descent into barbarism to chilling effect. This relevant and timely political allegory will remind many of J.M. Coetzee's Waiting for the Barbarians. (Jan.)

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    Biography

    Imre Kertesz, who was born in 1929 and imprisoned in Auschwitz and Buchenwald as a youth, worked as a journalist and playwright before publishing Fatelessness, his first novel, in 1975. He is the author of Looking for a Clue, The British Flag, Kaddish for an Unborn Child, Liquidation, and Gallery-Diary 1961-1991. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2002. He lives in Budapest and Berlin.

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