Description
Written with a "formal playfulness [that] suggests Kundera with A.D.D." (illage Voice), Georgi Gospodinov's The Physics of Sorrow became an underground cult classic upon its 2012 release. In a radical reimagining of the minotaur myth, a narrator named Georgi constructs the story of his life like a labyrinth, meandering through the past to find the melancholy child at the center of it all. Spanning from antiquity to the Anthropocene, he catalogs curious instances of abandonment, recounts scenes of a turbulent boyhood in 1970s Bulgaria, and even has a bizarre run-in with an eccentric flaneur named Gaustine. The result is a profoundly moving portrait of communist Bulgaria, in which the "real quest . . . is to find a way to live with sadness, to allow it to be a source of empathy and salutary hesitation" (Garth Greenwell, New Yorker).
Winner of the Jan Michalski Prize for Literature
Finalist for the PEN Literary Award for Translation and the Strega Europeo
About the Author
Georgi Gospodinov is one of Bulgaria's most lauded authors. His novel Time Shelter won the International Booker Prize and the Premio Strega Europeo, among other prizes. Angela Rodel is a prolific translator of Bulgarian literature and won the International Booker Prize for translation.
Book Information
ISBN 9781324094890
Author Georgi Gospodinov
Format Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint WW Norton & Co
Publisher WW Norton & Co
Details
Subtitle: |
A Novel |
Imprint: |
WW Norton & Co |