Imre Kertész quotes - page 3
Imre Kertész was a Hungarian novelist and Holocaust survivor, best known for his novel "Fatelessness." His work explores themes of identity, fate, and the impact of totalitarian regimes. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature and became an important voice in postwar European literature. Here are 64 of his quotes:
Thereafter, the scenes had succeeded one another, turn and turn about, in the drama as in reality, to the point that, in the end, Kingbitter did not know what to admire more: the author's-his dead friend's-crystal-clear foresight or his own, so to say, remorseful determination to identify with his prescribed role and stick to the story.
Nowadays, though, with the lapse of nine years, Kingbitter was interested in something else. His story had reached an end, but he himself was still here, posing a problem for which he more and more put off finding a solution. He would either have to carry on his story, which had proved impossible, or else start a new story, which had proved equally impossible. Kingbitter undoubtedly could see solutions to hand, both better ones and worse; indeed, if he reflected more deeply, solutions were all he could see, rather than lives.
Imre Kertész
Imre Kertész
Occupation: Hungarian Author
Born: November 9, 1929
Died: March 31, 2016
Quotes count: 64
Wikipedia: Imre Kertész
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