Czech writer Vitezslav Nezval (1900-58) was one of the leading Surrealist poets of the 20th century. Prague with Fingers of Rain is his classic 1936 collection in which Prague’s many-sided life – its glamorous history, various weathers, different kinds of people – becomes symbolic of what is contradictory and paradoxical in life itself.
Allowed to enter England in 1938, Ewald Osers was not to see his home town, Prague, for another twenty-seven years. In the intervening years Ewald Osers would become one of the best known translators of European literature in the twentieth century. This memoir presents an account of the many works he has translated.
Svazek obsahuje verše současného amerického básníka, scénáristy a dramatika, které kromě intimních reflexí přinášejí i jeho postřehy z cest.
Vůbec se zdá, že autorovo putování po nejrůznějších kontinentech se stává jedním z "hnacích motorů" jeho poetiky, která se svým pojetím hlásí spíše ke všednímu, až civilnímu tónu. Tato koncepce pak dává Raganovi možnost, aby se konkrétně vyjádřil k nejrůznějším historickým či společenským problémům určité země, kterou právě navštívil. V tomto básnickém souboru se do centra autorova zájmu dostaly dva sousední státy uprostřed Evropy - Čechy a Slovensko. Zatímco u druhého z nich se Ragan pokouší navázat především na tradici lidových balad, první z nich ho doslova "uhranul" nepřeberným množstvím kulturních památek, mýty i pověstmi, bohatou architekturou i dějinnými rozpory. Snad i proto Ragan tvrdí, že píše poezii, aby "pohnul myslí králů a popíchl svědomí společnosti".
It is September 1944; the war is going badly for the Germans, and they are in a hurry to complete their 'final solution'. Compromises are being made on all sides, conditions are unspeakable, rumours are rife, but nothing definite is known of the Nazis' intentions. On the outskirts of a concentration camp in northern Bohemia three people - two eighteen-year-old men and a desperately lost young woman, Leah - are thrown together, sharing their precarious existence in an attic room. While the world disintegrates around them their relationships are charged with passion, their days filled with erotic and spiritual attraction. Caught in the web of their relationships, their futures are uncertain and any choices they have left to make will be made in the face of almost certain death...
"Fifteen-year-old Hanka Kaudersova has ginger hair and clear, green eyes. hen her family is deported to Auschwitz, her mother, father and younger brother are sent to the gas chamber. By a twist of fate, Hanka is faced with a simple alternative- follow her family, or work in as SS brothel behind the eastern front. She chooses to live, her Aryan looks allowing her to disguise the fact that she is Jewish. As the German army retreats from the Russian front, Hanka battles cold, hunger, fear and shame, sustained by her hatred for the men she entertains, her friendship with the mysterious Estelle, and her fierce, burning desire for life. ovely Green Eyes explores the compromises and sacrifices that an individual may make in order to survive, the way a woman can retain her identity in the face of appalling trauma, and the value of human life itself. This is a remarkable novel, which soars beyond nightmare, leaving the reader with a transcendent sense of hope."
The narrator of Ivan Klima's novel has temporarily abandoned his work-in-progress -an essay on Kafka -and exchanged his writer's pen for the orange vest of a Prague road-sweeper. As he works, he meditates on Czechoslovakia, on Kafka, on life, on art and, obsessively, on his passionate and adulterous love affair with the sculptress Daria. Gradually he admits the impossibility of being at once an honest writer and an honest lover, and with that agonizing discovery comes a moment of choice.
Although Seifert lived through the many historic turns of his homeland, his was not a political poetry, except in its constant expression of love for his homeland, its beauties and its values. He was the great poet of Prague, of love, of the senses. His work was unpretentious, lyrical yet irreverent, earthy, charming. Seifert was known for the simplicity of his verse, yet his poems are full of surprises, never what at first they seem.