Synopses & Reviews
Adventures in Immediate Irreality, the masterwork of Max Blecher--a magnificent writer who brings to mind Bruno Schulz--paints in vivid colors the crises of "irreality" that plagued him in his youth, eerie mirages wherein he would glimpse future events, glowing glimpses unsettling in every way.
Review
"When you read his books it's hard to believe your eyes. The author of this masterpiece was a twenty-five-year-old already weakened by disease, but Blecher's words don't merely describe the objects--they dig their talons into the things and hoist them high." Herta Müller
Review
"Blecher has often been compared to Kafka (and not without reason), but the strongest connection, however, is with Salvador Dalí. Like Dalí's 'soft clocks,' everything here is about to melt. It is as though Blecher's world is always on the verge of ontological collapse; from behind the veil of things, nothingness stares out at him." The Times Literary Supplement
Review
"An extraordinary writer, in the family of Kafka and Bruno Schulz. A short life, overwhelmed by disease; a small--but great--magical work. Hallucinatory, intense, and deeply authentic, its literary force is fueled, paradoxically and not entirely, by an acute sensitivity and ardor." Norman Manea
Synopsis
Often called "the Kafka of Romania," Max Blecher died young but not before creating this incandescent novel.
Synopsis
Adventures in Immediate Irreality, the masterwork of the Romanian writer Max Blecher, vividly paints the crises of "irreality" that plagued him in his youth: eerie and unsettling mirages wherein he would glimpse future events. In gliding chapters that move with a peculiar dream logic of their own, this memoiristic novel sketches the tremulous, frightening, and exhilarating awakenings of a young man.
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About the Author
Max Blecher, born in 1909 into a Jewish family in Romania, contracted tuberculosis of the spine at 19, and spent the rest of his life in hospitals. Despite his illness, he wrote steadily and carried on an intense correspondence with many, including André Breton, André Gide, and Martin Heidegger. He died at the age of 28.Working with great Czech, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, French, Italian, German,