Also picked up at HPB today #blameitonlitsy #foodandlit #Hungary @BarbaraBB @Catsandbooks
Also picked up at HPB today #blameitonlitsy #foodandlit #Hungary @BarbaraBB @Catsandbooks
The past is never settled in this unsettling novel by Magda Szabo.
The murder of young Henriette in WWII has a lasting effect on all of the three families that had been peacefully living closely together in Budapest until the. Her death is symbolic for all that happens in the book during the war and the communist period afterwards. In their complicated attempts to save one another, the characters are just as likely to destroy one another. ⬇️
#WeeklyForecast 29/23
Another #NYRB for #FoodAndLit and two light reads. I am kind of enjoying The Gifted School and kind of hating The Worst Kind of Want. No final verdict though, I am in the midst of both.
On Katalin Street in 1930s Hungary, three families are bound by friendship and then tragedy. Iren Elekes, daughter of a headmaster, is the good child. Her younger sister, Blanka, is impulsive and spontaneous. Henrietta Held is shy, delicate. and in need of protection. Balint is intelligent and handsome and loved by all the girls, each in their own way. It‘s a dreamy, nonlinear novel about memory, regret, and the consequences of living in the past.
I had to miss the discussion yesterday, but I loved this beautiful book that shows how tragedy and devastating loss can change the trajectory of our lives forever. I‘m a fan of both books I‘ve read by this author now. Thanks for the great selection @GatheringBooks ❤️
#NYRBBookClub Q6 of 6. @vivastory @BarbaraBB @catebutler @Liz_M @sprainedbrain @KVanRead @LeahBergen @Leftcoastzen @daena @arubabookwoman @emilyhaldi @quietjenn @mklong @youneverarrived @Reviewsbylola @batsy @Tanisha_A @Theaelizabet @Billypar @merelybookish @saresmoore @sarahbarnes @readordierachel @DrexEdit
#NYRBBookClub Q5 of 6. @vivastory @BarbaraBB @catebutler @Liz_M @sprainedbrain @KVanRead @LeahBergen @Leftcoastzen @daena @arubabookwoman @emilyhaldi @quietjenn @mklong @youneverarrived @Reviewsbylola @batsy @Tanisha_A @Theaelizabet @Billypar @merelybookish @saresmoore @sarahbarnes @readordierachel @DrexEdit
#NYRBBookClub Q4 of 6. @vivastory @BarbaraBB @catebutler @Liz_M @sprainedbrain @KVanRead @LeahBergen @Leftcoastzen @daena @arubabookwoman @emilyhaldi @quietjenn @mklong @youneverarrived @Reviewsbylola @batsy @Tanisha_A @Theaelizabet @Billypar @merelybookish @saresmoore @sarahbarnes @readordierachel @DrexEdit
#NYRBBookClub Q3 of 6. @vivastory @BarbaraBB @catebutler @Liz_M @sprainedbrain @KVanRead @LeahBergen @Leftcoastzen @daena @arubabookwoman @emilyhaldi @quietjenn @mklong @youneverarrived @Reviewsbylola @batsy @Tanisha_A @Theaelizabet @Billypar @merelybookish @saresmoore @sarahbarnes @readordierachel @DrexEdit
#NYRBBookClub Q2 of 6. @vivastory @BarbaraBB @catebutler @Liz_M @sprainedbrain @KVanRead @LeahBergen @Leftcoastzen @daena @arubabookwoman @emilyhaldi @quietjenn @mklong @youneverarrived @Reviewsbylola @batsy @Tanisha_A @Theaelizabet @Billypar @merelybookish @saresmoore @sarahbarnes @readordierachel @DrexEdit
#NYRBBookClub Q1 of 6.
#NYRBBookClub I was very moved by this tale of neighbors who seemed content & intertwined before World War II .War will reshape their world forever, some will not survive & those who do will feel the altered world of occupation.
You feel their hopes & aspirations, share their memories of a world that no longer exists.As I was reading this I was overwhelmed thinking about families & neighbors,experiencing this right now , in Ukraine.Great pick .
Compelling and beautifully written, with deep things to say about the nature of life - how we are shaped and defined by our memories of experiences as much as the events themselves. Bleak, but not hopeless, just matter of fact. I'll definitely be seeking out more by Szabo. #nyrbbookclub
A bleak and quiet sort of novel that speaks about the ways in which lives are changed during war and the aftermath of it. The sense of community and family was palpable. The ghost character of Henriette shows how much people, events and memories stay with us. It was beautifully told and I liked it a lot, although I didn‘t find it overly immersive. ⭐️⭐️⭐️ #nyrbbookclub
This was a cryptic read at the start; it was a little hard to get my bearings. Then the story began to take shape & the characters became alive. When I finished I went right back to the beginning & to re-read Blanka's chapter. It's an incredibly sad story; just quietly devastating. There's no easy hope being peddled here, no redemption. Just the grim realities of lives upended from war & occupation & the steep costs of living 💔 #nyrbbookclub
This book examines the fallout of WWII & years of Soviet occupation on three households on an idyllic street in Budapest. It is beautifully written & very sad. It does not shrink from the truth that one horrible event can haunt people forever. That's a simplistic description of a nuanced novel about complicated truths. Reading it in light of what's happening in the Ukraine felt particularly poignant. 😞
@vivastory @GatheringBooks #nyrbbookclub
Such beautiful writing, and such an incredibly dark, depressing story. I missed reading Iza‘s Ballad with the #NYRBBookClub a couple of years ago, but I definitely need to read more from this author. Looking forward to the discussion next weekend.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
This weekend, I've been reading the two pictured books, and a couple of stories by Rebecca Roanhorse for class. All good! #weekendreading
#BookReport 06/22 #WeeklyForecast 07/22
A combined book report and forecast. I just finished To Paradise so I have at last read two books during the past week. Next week will be filled with books for #ReadingAfrica2022, #NYRBBookclub, and #ToB22 buy first I have to read We Slaves of Surinam for my new bookclub. A tough one about my country‘s infamous past.
I find this a much more engaging book than The Door, which I read by Szabo in the past. It‘s hard to say enjoy for a book like this, but I feel more developed as a reader and as a person for having encountered these characters and their lives and reactions to the horrors they endured. #nyrbbookclub
It is always the most inexplicable things that make us lose self-control.
#wondrouswednesday @Eggs
1. Tagged. Not necessarily the next one I'll read, but it is at the top 🙂
2. No. Still working on stuff published 20+ years ago 😂
3. The Pillars of the Earth
“THE PROCESS of growing old bears little resemblance to the way it is presented, either in novels or in works of medical science.” #greatfirstlines #nyrbbookclub
Getting ready for our upcoming #NYRBBookClub title for February. Paired with burrata salad with pomegranate seeds, peach slices, dry figs, kale leaves, focaccia bread, walnuts and all yumminess.
#NYRBBookClub people - hosted by @vivastory - here are my February picks: Do choose the one that stands out for you. @BarbaraBB @catebutler @daena @arubabookwoman @emilyhaldi @quietjenn @sprainedbrain @KVanRead @mklong @youneverarrived @LeahBergen @Leftcoastzen @Liz_M @merelybookish @readordierachel @saresmoore @sarahbarnes @Reviewsbylola @batsy @Tanisha_A @Theaelizabet @Billypar
I'm normally on the fence about magical realism but I loved the way Szabó used it here to show how memories of the war dead lingered with survivors long after the war. Henriette is a benign ghost, but the lives of the others on Katalin Street never recover. The headmaster loses his faith in rules, his daughter her trust in her fiancee, and the young doctor his ability to plan, to try for the future.
She had no house, no home, no family...
Henriette lives on Katalin Street with two other families. In 1944 her parents are deported and she is in hiding.
Well, it would appear that these streets DO have names. 😉 #PromptFail
#WhereTheStreetsHaveNoName
#WanderingJune
#PersephoneBooks
#NYRB
“The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there,” said L.P. Hartley in his opening for The Go-Between. No matter how hard we try not to live in the past, it shaped who we are and how we live in the present. Szabo‘s characters are so in love with each other; & as we know, those who love us the most hurt us the deepest. The pain stays forever, & moving on is an impossible, uphill task. Another excellent read from Szabo! 5⭐️
Just finished this, and I think I want to read everything Magda Szabó has written. -Becca
Favorites July 2018:
Human Acts-Han Kang
My Year of Rest&Relaxation-Ottessa Moshfegh
Brazen-Penelope Bagieu
Katalin Street-Magda Szabo
The Patchwork Girl of Oz-Baum
Fun Home-Alison Bechdel
Music
BELLSTARR: Crash ep.
GOAT GIRL:The Man
LES MISERABLES Original London Cast
SCHLAMMPEITZIGER: What's Fruit?
ANTEROS:Cherry Drop
PARTNER:Everybody Knows
CHARLOTTE BASH:Leave
KEISHA:Woman
WAXX:Labrador
SHEA DIAMOND:Keisha Complexion
LITTLE QUIRKS:Crumbled
The memories, tough dilemmas on Katalin Street, overlooking the Danube river, resonate throughout the lives 3 family. My fave the Held family, who are deported & the death of their daughter, Henriette,who reappears in a ghost like memory to all the families, a constant reminder of the past that bind them.
A very high recommendation for this. Fantastic!
I completely enjoyed 'The Door'. Great story .. I love her depictions and characters....starting this tonight! Anyone else a fan?
Katalin Street looks at the lives of 3 families from one street in Budapest leading up to, during, and following WWII. The central events occur during the war, when the adults in one family are sent to the camps and the teenage daughter is killed, but much of the novel explores the aftermath of war and loss. Interesting premise and structure, although I got a bit lost at the beginning and had to reread the synopsis.
Library Haul. Do you think my boss would understood if I called and took tomorrow off because I have too many books to read? #thestruggleisreal