De legende van de heilige drinker

by Joseph Roth

Paper Book, 2012

Status

Available

Call number

2.roth

Genres

Publication

Amsterdam Veen 2012

User reviews

LibraryThing member roblong
A beautiful dream of Catholic spirituality and alcoholism (those not unrelated phenomena).
LibraryThing member vaellus
I'm not happy with the translation of this simple tale. The translator admits to occasionally translating simple words into more complicated ones (French and Latin words) because he felt Roth's book faithfully rendered in English without the translator's intervention would have sounded bland, raw,
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simple-minded and like Hemingway... You what? Bad idea, bad, bad, bad idea.
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LibraryThing member soylentgreen23
I preferred this to "Confession of a Murderer;" it was so much more spirited, if you'll forgive the pun, and a worthy little book to pass an afternoon with.

A confessed alcoholic buys a new wallet and finds it full of money; he determines to give some of it to charity, but on the way to the church
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gets dragged into several heavy bouts of drinking. Wonderfully philosophical, even if you are sober when you read it.
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LibraryThing member JosephCamilleri
This autobiographical novella reads like a 20th century fable. The protagonist, Andreas Karnak, is a Polish immigrant in Paris who has been through rough times and is now an alcoholic who lives on the streets. A stranger lends him two hundred francs, which he fails to return despite his best
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intentions. Andreas is a tragic and flawed yet dignified figure, who is a "saint" because he seems to live in the world without ever actually being part of it. His simplicity makes him appreciate "miracles" which more fortunate citizens simply miss.
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Language

Original language

German

Original publication date

1939 (Duits)
1980 (Nederlands)

Physical description

83 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

9789045041339
Page: 0.3019 seconds