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Casanova In Bolzano
 
 

Casanova In Bolzano (Broché)

de Sandor Marai (Auteur), George Szirtes (Traduction)
4.0 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (1 commentaire client)
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Descriptions du produit

From Publishers Weekly

October 31, 1756: the incorrigible playboy and roving gambler Giacomo Casanova escapes from a pestilent Venetian prison. Aiming for Munich, he stops near the Austrian border at an inn in Bolzano. The imperious septuagenarian duke of Parma, Casanova's victorious former rival for the hand of Francesca—then a teenager, now the duchess of Parma, and still in love with Casanova—just happens to live nearby. To prevent another duel, the duke blackmails the legendary womanizer: either he seduces Francesca, breaks her heart and leaves, thereby curing her of the "infection" that is Casanova, or he risks being killed or turned in to the authorities. The fervent colloquy echoes the centerpiece tête-à-tête that structures Embers, Márai's only other novel to be translated into English. Unlike Embers, however, this book fizzles out; an austere and poignant exposition on the inexorability of fate that has been building for over 200 pages collapses into an intolerably tedious, long-winded rant by Francesca as she tries to persuade Casanova to run away with her. The harangue makes it hard to believe that anyone would fight over her and makes the reader wonder why another Márai (1900–1989) work was not translated before this one.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.

From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com

This entertaining and profound novel validates a nagging suspicion that I have had since reading Embers, Sandor Marai's only other novel available in translation: that Sandor Marai (1900-89) is one of the great modern novelists, in the same league as Gabriel García Márquez (with whom he shares many qualities). The delay in acknowledging this comes from the tragic happenstance, at least for English readers, that Marai wrote in Hungarian, a language not widely translated. The confinement of a writer of Marai's talent, at once dramatic and witty, to a language of so few readers seems almost criminal. Of course, Marai wouldn't have felt this way. He was passionately devoted to Hungarian, and, in exile in California after leaving Hungary for political reasons, he referred to his language as "his only homeland."

Casanova in Bolzano is the fictional account of Casanova after an escape from jail in Venice, and the means by which Marai holds forth on just about everything important in human activity: love, honor, how to live, how to die, the importance of style and dignity, and, of course, the never-ending difficulties between men and women. And, as in any good novel, it is successful because its intriguing characters are in the midst of confronting one another.

The first of these is Casanova himself. When he arrives in Bolzano, he excites the citizens, who "understood, in short, that a genuine man was as unusual a phenomenon as a genuine woman. A man who is not trying to prove anything by raising his voice or rattling his sword, who does not crow, who asks no favors except those he himself can grant . . . because every nerve, every spark of his spirit and every muscle of his body, is devoted to the power that is life: that kind of man is indeed the rarest of creatures."

Casanova's first antagonist is the Duke of Parma, with whom he fought and lost a duel over a woman. Marai's great gift is his ability to demonstrate his characters' qualities rather than merely describe them. For instance, the duke's dignity is obvious in every aspect of his life, such as his style, how easy he is to anger, and in his devotion to his sense of right and wrong. With Marai's characters, the experience for the reader is almost extra-literary, or just plain real, in that you have the sense of being in the presence of someone you wouldn't want to offend.

After the Duke of Parma wounds Casanova, he takes the bleeding man to a surgeon. There, in front of the surgeon's door, the duke says: "You will have everything you need. Once you are well you will leave the region. Nor will you ever come back. Should you ever return . . . I will either kill you myself, or have you killed, make no mistake about it." With Marai such episodes are not the end but the beginning, since as he says, "You cannot, after all, settle things with a duel and a little bloodshed."

Casanova's other antagonist is Francesca, the woman over whom he fought the duel. At the time of the duel she was just a girl of 15, but even then it was "as if she were saturated with light, so intensely did that sweet yet disturbing energy flow from her. . . . There was light in her, and when a man looked into her eyes . . . everything around him was brighter, more real, more substantially true." When Casanova returns, she is older, married to the Duke of Parma. She has learned to write and has been thinking about her feelings. When she hears that her lover is in town again, she sends him a note: "I must see you." Now Marai portrays Francesca as a woman, not a girl, furious at being in love and unable to do anything about it. This, and her vitality, make her a very dangerous woman indeed. The climax of the novel is the confrontation between Francesca and Casanova, in which it is unclear if she will dedicate her life to him or kill him. Marai presents this scene with a keen sense for drama, which he handles with a quality that verges on delight. You can almost see his wink at the reader, as though acknowledging the fun he is having.

This sounds like the description of an opera, but the book saves itself by its drama, its language and its observations about being alive. In Casanova in Bolzano Marai has a voice similar to Márquez's, with descriptions that are lush and filled with unexpected details. In fact, it is hard to imagine that Márquez hasn't read Marai, although the path of a book being translated from Hungarian into Spanish seems just as improbable as from Hungarian to English.

In addition to the description, Marai's characters have a vitality that recalls those of Márquez in One Hundred Years of Solitude. For instance, here Casanova describes people who had him arrested: "These are the people who judged me! Patricides, murderers of their own sons, usurers, gluttons, parasites, living off orphans' tears and sucking the blood of widows with their taxes -- and these are the people who dared pass judgment on me!" It could be a speech by Márquez's Colonel Buendia.

Marai includes such observations as this: There is a "moment of silence at a vital turn in a man's life." Or "we love them simply because there is in the world a kind of purpose whose true working lies beyond our wit, which desires to articulate itself much as an idea does."

Casanova in Bolzano is at once erotic in its texture and sense of longing, witty in its observation about the human condition and, on top of everything else, great fun to read. There are another 40 Marai books still imprisoned in Hungarian, but with any luck they will be liberated after all. I can hardly wait.

Reviewed by Craig Nova
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved. --Ce texte fait référence à une édition épuisée ou non disponible de ce titre.


Détails sur le produit

  • Broché: 304 pages
  • Editeur : Vintage Books USA; Édition : Reprint (novembre 2005)
  • Langue : Anglais
  • ISBN-10: 0375712968
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375712968
  • Moyenne des commentaires client : 4.0 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (1 commentaire client)
  • Classement parmi les ventes Amazon.fr : 352.057 en Livres en anglais (Voir les Meilleures Ventes dans la rubrique Livres en anglais)
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4.0 étoiles sur 5 A RICHLY COMPELLING STORY, 20 novembre 2004
Par Gail Cooke (TX, USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Ce commentaire fait référence à cette édition : Casanova in Bolzano (Relié)
The life of writer Sandor Marai has all the elements of a dramatic novel, regrettably a tragic one. Born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1900, he had established an enviable reputation in only 30-some years. His nobility, humanism and hatred for the Fascists earned him the enmity of Admiral Horthy's Hungarian regime and later the malevolence of the Communists who were to be in power. All copies of his books were destroyed, and his work was banned forever.

Disillusioned and in despair he left his beloved country, first to find sanctuary in Italy and then in the United States. In 1989 he took his own life never knowing of democracy's return to his native land. Some five years later three of his works were found in French translations. In 2001 we were privileged to have the first English translation of one of his novels, Embers. It was published to great acclaim, as I feel certain that Casanova in Bolzano will be received.

In an opening author's note Marai makes it clear that the only actual event in this story is Casanova's escape from an unspeakably horrid cell in Venice's ducal palace in 1796. What follows is totally fiction - ah, but what fiction it is.

With the assistance of a defrocked priest, Balbi, Casanova makes his way to an Italian village, Bolzano. Once there he demands and is given the finest rooms by an innkeeper who at first distrusts the pair because of their ragged appearances and lack of luggage. But Marai has given Casanova a silver tongue, one which commands, influences, and, of course, woos.

Bolzano is far from what most would consider a safe haven because some years before Casanova had dueled with the duke of Parma for the love of Francesca, then a 15-year-old girl. The Duke got the better of Casanova but did not take his life, rather making him promise never to see Francesca again.

Now, the duke is an old man and has come upon a note Francesca has written to her former lover asking to see him. She, too, has changed over the years. Married to the Duke she is no longer a susceptible teenager but a rather willful woman. Will the two meet?

Throughout his richly told tale Marai treats readers to painterly details and ruminations pertaining to the human condition - desire, honor, love, duty. Here is a novelist whose life was far too short, yet he speaks to us as if he were alive today. And his voice is sublime.

- Gail Cooke

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