Niki: The Story of a Dog

by Tibor Dery

Other authorsEdward Hyams (Translator), George Szirtes (Introduction)
Paperback, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

894.51133

Collection

Publication

NYRB Classics (2009), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 144 pages

Description

" The Dog adopted the Ancsas in the spring of '48 - so the story begins. The Ancsas are a middle-aged couple living on the outskirts of Budapest in a ruinous Hungary that is just beginning to wake up from the nightmare of World War II. The new Communist government promises to set things straight, and Mr. Ancsa, an engineer, is as eager to get to work building the future as he is to forget the past. The last thing he has time for is a little mongrel bitch, pregnant with her first litter. But Niki knows better, and before long she is part of the Ancsa household. The Ancsas even take her along with them when Mr. Ancsa's new job requires a move to an apartment in the city. Then Mr. Ancsa is swept up in a political crackdown disappearing without a trace. For five years he does not return, five years of absence, silence, fear, and the constant struggle to survive ?ve years during which Mrs. Ancsa and Niki have only each other. The story of Niki, an ordinary dog, and the Ancsas, a no less ordinary couple, is an extraordinarily touching, utterly unsentimental, parable about caring, kindness, and the endurance of love."… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member meggyweg
The earliest dog story I've ever read, a la Marley and Me -- though I doubt it was THE first, I expect this genre is very old. This one is set against the backdrop of 1950s Communist Hungary -- the spectre of which grows ever more menacing as the story progresses. This book turned out to be a lot
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more interesting and thought-provoking than I thought it would be, and unlike most dog stories it's quite matter-of-fact and not at all sentimental. A person could read it for the "life in Communist Europe" aspect alone as well as for the dog part.
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LibraryThing member patronus11
Moving, intelligent, artful. That's all I ask for in a book, and this modest little book delivers, marred only by some gently outdated attitudes. The descriptions of a dog's experience of life are insightful and wise, and the way peripheral way it addresses life in the age of the gulag is subtle,
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powerful. It has none of the heaviness of Solzhenitsyn but is somehow just weighty enough. Niki is just an ordinary dog - an every-dog - but we love her all the more for that. What a writer. I'll be checking out more of Dery's work and that of his contemporary, Sandor Marai.
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Language

Original language

Hungarian

Original publication date

1956

Physical description

144 p.; 7.9 inches

ISBN

159017318X / 9781590173183

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