War with the Newts by Karel Capek, Ewald Osers (Translator)

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Textbook (Paperback - New Edition)

  • 240pp
  • Sales Rank: 119,427

Textbook Information

  • ISBN-13: 9780945774105
  • Edition Description: New Edition
  • Edition Number: 1
  • Pub. Date: January 1990
  • Publisher: Catbird Press
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: January 1990
  • Publisher: Catbird Press
  • Format: Textbook Paperback, 240pp
  • Sales Rank: 119,427

Synopsis

One of the great anti-utopian satires of the twentieth century. Man discovers a species of giant, intelligent newts and learns to exploit them so successfully that the newts gain enough skills and arms to challenge man's place at the top of the animal kingdom.

Library Journal

Issued to celebrate the centennial of Capek's birth, these three volumes testify to the versatility and timeless appeal of one of the first Czech writers to achieve world acclaim. Toward the Radical Center contains, in new or revised translations, a selection of Capek's charming short stories, essays, and travel sketches, as well as four of his major plays, including R.U.R. , a brilliant drama about the destruction of humankind by artificial people, Rossum's Universal Robots. The dangers of runaway technology, militarism, and greed are further explored in Capek's hilarious satire, War with the Newts. When Captain van Toch discovers giant, intelligent newts on a remote island off Sumatra, he teaches them to use knives to find food, fight off sharks, and collect pearls for him. When he dies, his partners turn his friendly venture into a huge international business with the newts (rapidly growing in numbers) and with the tools and supplies for them. The newts are taught to read, to build massive underwater projects, and to protect the shores of the countries that bought them. They become an essential and powerful part of the industrial machine, and thus warnings about their potential danger to humankind go unheeded. In the end the newts start to blow up continents to create new shores for themselves, while governments argue impotently. Issued in a new, vibrant translation, this immensely entertaining novel has lost none of its relevance and spark. Considered Capek's masterpiece, the trilogy Three Novels explores the plurality of a man and his life, the impossibility of understanding all facets of truth. In Hordubal, events leading to the murder of a brooding, solitary farmer in a small Carpathian village are presented from the perspective of the victim, the villagers, and the police. Although Hordubal's wife and her lover are convicted, their motives and actions, as well as Hordubal's, remain partly mysterious. Meteor concerns an unknown, unconscious man brought into a hospital after a plane crash and attempts by a nurse, poet, and clairvoyant to penetrate the mystery of his life. The stories they derive are convincing and at points they converge, yet the real truth cannot be known. In An Ordinary Life , a retired railway official's attempt to examine his life reveals powerful and complex aspects of his personality that have shaped his seemingly ordinary life. If you must choose, select War with the Newts , but all three volumes are recommended.-- Marie Bednar, Pennsylvania State Univ. Libs., University Park

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Customer Reviews

Vonnegut meets Heinleinby Anonymous

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April 06, 2004: But Capek came before either of them, so he's really at the root of social-science-fiction with Orwell and Wells. This book is a humanist tale--don't treat others poorly; a communist tale--the workers seize the world from the lazy capitalists; and a vision of what blind dependence on 'machination' can do to culture--all written 70 years ago!!! Brilliant, but also complellingly readable. I would give it to any curious person over 12 (or maybe 10 these days).

Intellectual, yet entertainingby Anonymous

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January 22, 2001: I found it amazing that War with the Newts was written in the 1930's. Many of the messages in the book still apply. Capek wrote a brilliant satire on the possible consequences of society's exploitative tendencies, drawing the reader into a humorous book (especially with his constant attempts to make the book seem realistic and quite often succeeding) and opening eyes to the book's 'morals.' As I read how the previously-exploited newts gained control, I became not only interested in the story itself but also wondered who are the newts in today's society.


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