Pfitz

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book Pfitz by Andrew Crumey, Dedalus Ebooks
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Andrew Crumey ISBN: 9781907650383
Publisher: Dedalus Ebooks Publication: January 5, 2010
Imprint: Dedalus Ebooks Language: English
Author: Andrew Crumey
ISBN: 9781907650383
Publisher: Dedalus Ebooks
Publication: January 5, 2010
Imprint: Dedalus Ebooks
Language: English
Pfitz is a surprisingly warm and likeable book, a combination of intellectual high-wire act and good traditional storytelling with a population of lovers and madmen we do care about, despite their advertised fictionality. Certainly Crumey�s narrative gymnastics have not affected his ability to create strong, fleshy characters, and none more fleshy, more fleshly, than Frau Luppen, Schenck�s middle-aged landlady, a great blown rose of a woman who express her affection for her lodger by feeding him bowls of inedible stew. Andrew Miller in The New York Times "Rreinnstadt is a place which exists nowhere - the conception of a 18th century prince who devotes his time, and that of his subjects, to laying down on paper the architecture and street-plans of this great, yet illusory city. Its inhabitants must also be devised: artists and authors, their fictional lives and works, all concocted by different departments. When Schenck, a worker in the Cartography Office, discovers the 'existence' of Pfitz, a manservant visiting Rreinnstadt, he sets about illicitly recreating Pfitz's life. Crumey is a daring writer: using the stuff of fairy tales, he ponders the difference between fact and fiction, weaving together philosophy and fantasy to create a magical, witty novel." Sunday Times Built out of fantasy, Andrew Crumey's novel stands, like the monumental museum at the centre of its imaginary city, as an edifice of erudition." Andrea Ashworth in The Times Literary Supplement
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Pfitz is a surprisingly warm and likeable book, a combination of intellectual high-wire act and good traditional storytelling with a population of lovers and madmen we do care about, despite their advertised fictionality. Certainly Crumey�s narrative gymnastics have not affected his ability to create strong, fleshy characters, and none more fleshy, more fleshly, than Frau Luppen, Schenck�s middle-aged landlady, a great blown rose of a woman who express her affection for her lodger by feeding him bowls of inedible stew. Andrew Miller in The New York Times "Rreinnstadt is a place which exists nowhere - the conception of a 18th century prince who devotes his time, and that of his subjects, to laying down on paper the architecture and street-plans of this great, yet illusory city. Its inhabitants must also be devised: artists and authors, their fictional lives and works, all concocted by different departments. When Schenck, a worker in the Cartography Office, discovers the 'existence' of Pfitz, a manservant visiting Rreinnstadt, he sets about illicitly recreating Pfitz's life. Crumey is a daring writer: using the stuff of fairy tales, he ponders the difference between fact and fiction, weaving together philosophy and fantasy to create a magical, witty novel." Sunday Times Built out of fantasy, Andrew Crumey's novel stands, like the monumental museum at the centre of its imaginary city, as an edifice of erudition." Andrea Ashworth in The Times Literary Supplement

More books from Dedalus Ebooks

Cover of the book The Dedalus Book of British Fantasy by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book Prague Noir by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Khalifah's Mirror by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Decadent Traveller by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book Alves & Co and Other Stories by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Road to Darkness by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Lost Musicians by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Fiery Angel by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book A Dutiful Son by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Ultimate Tragedy by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Angels of Perversity by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Mandarin(and other stories) by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book Sappho by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Vatard Sisters by Andrew Crumey
Cover of the book The Devil is a Gentleman by Andrew Crumey
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy