Doppelgänger

15 October 2019

Territory Rights — Worldwide including Canada, but excluding the British Commonwealth.

Daša Drndic (Author), S.D. Curtis (Translator), Celia Hawkesworth (Translator)

Description

Longlisted for the Republic of Consciousness Prize 2019, a swift, biting novel from the late Croatian master, Dasa Drndic 

Two elderly people, Artur and Isabella, meet and have a passionate sexual encounter on New Year’s Eve. Details of the lives of Artur, a retired Yugoslav army captain, and Isabella, a Holocaust survivor, are revealed through police dossiers. As they fight loneliness and aging, they take comfort in small things: for Artur, a collection of 274 hats; for Isabella, a family of garden gnomes who live in her apartment. Later, we meet the ill-fated Pupi, who dreamed of becoming a sculptor but instead became a chemist and then a spy. As Eileen Battersby wrote, “As he stands, in the zoo, gazing at a pair of rhinos, in a city most likely present-day Belgrade, this battered Everyman feels very alone: ‘I would like to tell someone, anyone, I’d like to tell someone: I buried Mother today.’” Pupi sets out to correct his family’s crimes by returning silverware to its original Jewish owners through the help of an unlikely friend, a pawnbroker.

Described by Dasa Drndic as “my ugly little book,” Doppelgänger was her personal favorite. 

Reviews

"Doppelgänger, a boldly virtuosic novel in two parts, mirroring the realities of Croatia and Serbia, sees Drndic delighting in Beckettian high art. More than any of Drndic’s wonderful collage, archival, semi-autobiographical narratives thus far translated, it is the brief, if immense, Doppelgänger that may surprise even her established readers." — Financial Times

"Fragmented but not disjointed, Beckettian as well as Bernhardian, Doppelgänger is complex, dark and funny: a strange gem." — Claire Messud, Guardian

"A work of continental gloom that promises that no one gets out of here alive." — Kirkus

"Her incisive skill and radical style render potentially grim reading compulsive. She was a voice of–and for–our times." — Times Literary Supplement

Paperback

9780811228916

137 x 203 mm • 160 pages

£12.99

Add to Basket

Ebook

9780811228923

Powered by Glassboxx

£12.99

Add to Basket