
The Cowards
$34.44
- Paperback
416 pages
- Release Date
9 July 2010
Summary
‘Benno blew a long note and it sounded hard and very sure, so I stopped worrying about him losing his tone while he was in the concentration camp. He hadn’t.’
The Cowards (1958) is Josef Skvorecky’s blackly comic tale of post-war politics that was immediately banned on publication. In 1945, in Kostelec, Danny is playing saxophone for the best jazz band in Czechoslovakia. Their trumpeter has just got out of a concentration camp, their bass player is only allowed in the band since he ow…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780141047676 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0141047674 |
| Author: | Josef Skvorecky |
| Publisher: | Penguin Books Ltd |
| Imprint: | Penguin Classics |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 416 |
| Release Date: | 9 July 2010 |
| Weight: | 310g |
| Dimensions: | 196mm x 130mm x 24mm |
| Series: | Penguin Modern Classics |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
Anyone who wants to know how it felt to be young, idealistic and innocent at the end of the war should read The Cowards * The Times Literary Supplement *Sceptical, humourous, liberal and humane. * London Review of Books *[The series] sheds remarkable light on the literature, culture and politics of the region…anyone coming fresh to the field will be captivated by the richness, variety, humour and pathos of a classic literature that, through a shared historical experience, transcends national and linguistic boundaries. – CJ Schüler * Independent on Sunday *This [series] is a wonderful idea … They are absurdist parables, by turns hilarious, unsettling and enigmatic. – Nicholas Lezard * Guardian *I urge you to go and read them. – Adam Thirlwell * New Statesman *This new series of Central European Classics is important well beyond simply providing ‘good reads’. – Stephen Vizinczey * Daily Telegraph *
About The Author
Josef Skvorecky
Josef Skvorecky (born in 1924) was a leading Czech novelist and dissident, a key figure in keeping alive from exile a liberal, humanistic Czech culture during the Cold War. His most famous novels are The Cowards, Miss Silver’s Past, The Bass Saxophone and The Engineer of Human Souls. He died in 2012, at the age of eighty-seven.
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