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Books in European Classics series

  • Cement

    Fyodor Vasilievich Gladkov, A.S. Arthur, C. Ashleigh

    Paperback (Northwestern University Press, Nov. 23, 1994)
    A classic of socialist realism, Cement became a model for Soviet fiction in the decades following its publication in the early 1920s. Gleb, a soldier hero, returns from the revolution to a world in transition, as demonstrated by the reorganization of the local cement factory for the massive national effort. His wife, Dasha, is now a leader of the Women's Section of the Communist Pary, an activist in a society where women are suddenly men's equals. Gleb finds that he cannot easily pick up the threads of their old relationship or adjust to this new social order.
  • The King David Report

    Stefan Heym

    Paperback (Northwestern University Press, )
    In this retelling of the biblical story, King Solomon commissions Ethan the Scribe to write the official history of King David. In return for the finest cooking in the land and the wages of a minor prophet, Ethan must write a proper record, full of glory and battles, statecraft and honor--a tribute to David and, of course, to Solomon, his heir. But as Ethan explores the story, he finds another life hidden behind the iron curtain dividing past from present: the story of a David who seduced, lied, bragged, and plundered his way to power. Ethan wonders: which life should be reported in the King David Report? Written by one of Germany's most acclaimed dissident authors, The King David Report is both an analysis of the writer's obligations to truth, and an astute satire on the workings of history and politics in a totalitarian state.
  • Nine Fairy Tales: and One More Thrown in for Good Measure

    Karel Capek, Josef Capek, Dagmar Herrmann

    Paperback (Northwestern University Press, Oct. 7, 1996)
    Karel Capek, author of the acclaimed War with the Newts, is one of the great Czechoslovak writers of the twentieth century. These fairy tales bear Capek's combination of the fantastic and the satirical, offering fairies, elves, and talking animals alongside references to detectives, secret police agents, luxury automobiles, and Hollywood starlets. Filled with the delight of language, dazzling wordplay, a sense of absurdity about the so-called adult world, and a deeply humane vision, these witty stories will appeal to readers of all ages.
  • Nine Fairy Tales OP: and One More Thrown in for Good Measure

    Karel Capek, Josef Capek, Dagmar Herrmann

    Paperback (Northwestern University Press, June 1, 1990)
    None
  • Cement

    Fyodor Vasilievich Gladkov, A. S. Arthur, C. Ashleigh

    Hardcover (Northwestern University Press, Nov. 23, 1994)
    A classic of socialist realism, Cement became a model for Soviet fiction in the decades following its publication in the early 1920s. Gleb, a soldier hero, returns from the revolution to a world in transition, as demonstrated by the reorganization of the local cement factory for the massive national effort. His wife, Dasha, is now a leader of the Women's Section of the Communist Pary, an activist in a society where women are suddenly men's equals. Gleb finds that he cannot easily pick up the threads of their old relationship or adjust to this new social order.
  • The Mystery of the Yellow Room

    Gaston Leroux

    Paperback (Dedalus Limited, March 1, 1998)
    The Mystery of the Yellow Room (1908) is Gaston Leroux's masterpiece and during his lifetime his most successful book. It is one of the classics of early 20th-century detective fiction. At the heart of the novel is the enigma: how could a murder take place in a locked room, which shows no sign of being entered?The novel is also about the rivalry to solve the case between the detective Frederick Larson, and a young investigative journalist, Rouletabille. Larson finds a suspect who is put on trial, only to have him cleared by Rouletabille, who reveals in the most dramatic fashion the identity of the real murderer.
  • The Mystery of the Sintra Road

    Eca de Queiroz, Ramalho Ortigao, Margaret Jull Costa

    Paperback (Dedalus Limited, Sept. 9, 2014)
    Two friends are kidnapped by several masked men, who, to judge by their manners and their accent are men of the best society. One of the friends is a doctor, and the masked men say that they need him to assist a noblewoman, who is about to give birth. When they reach the house, they find no such noblewoman, only a dead man. Another man, known only as A.M.C., bursts in at this point and declares that the man died of opium poisoning. The doctor writes a letter to a newspaper editor, setting out the facts as he knows them. These facts are rebutted first by a friend of A.M.C. and then by the first masked man, who explains the whole story...Eça de Queiroz wrote this spoof 'mystery' with his friend Ramalho Ortigá£o, publishing it in the form of a series of anonymous letters in the Diá¡rio de Notá­cias between 24 July and 27 September 1870. Many readers believed the letters to be genuine. As the book progresses, one sees Eça gradually getting into his stride as a novelist, equally at home with humour and with human drama.Recently turned into a major Portuguese feature film it will delight avid Eça fans and lovers of mysteries.
  • The Prince

    Niccolo Machiavelli, W. K. Marriott

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 13, 2016)
    There have been many political philosophies published throughout the time of literate man, but few have made such an impact in so few words as Niccolo Machiavelli’s The Prince. This eminently quotable treatise on the nature of rulers is unsettling in that it does not merely discuss the specific political geography of 16th century Europe, a world comprised of kings and nobles who ruled absolutely; it has endured for nearly 500 years because it is an all-encompassing understanding of men in power, and the common traits, motives and struggles which have characterized leaders from Roman emperors to modern-day presidents.
  • Seraphita:

    Honore de Balzac, Clara Bell, David Blow

    (Dedalus Limited, Feb. 28, 2011)
    The story revolves round the angelic and mysterious hermaphrodite Seraphita who seems to inspire love in all she meets. The battle for her affection leads Wilf and Minna past earthly knowledge and into the deeper mysteries of life. Set against the rugged landscape of 18th century Norway, Seraphita is the most unusual and bizarre novel in Balzac's Comedie Humaine.
  • Dark Vales

    Raimon Casellas, Eva Bosch, Alan Yates

    Paperback (Dedalus Limited, Sept. 9, 2014)
    The protagonist, Father Llatzer, a priest banished for doctrinal heresy to an isolated, backward mountain parish, struggles to achieve personal redemption by bringing salvation to his primitive, taciturn, rural flock. Their mute atavism is disturbed only by the local whore, Footloose, embodying all the forces against which the priest's reforming mission is directed. Ambiguity surrounds the denouement of that conflict.Dark Vales is as as compelling today as when it was first written.
  • Peter Schlemihl

    Adalbert von Chamisso, L. Von L-.Wertheim

    Hardcover (Calder Publications Ltd, May 5, 1970)
    None