The Lair Norman Manea, Oana Sanziana Marian

Series:
Margellos World Republic of Letters
Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
03 Apr 2012
ISBN:
9780300179941
Dimensions:
256 pages: 210 x 140 x 27mm

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Set in New York City in the months preceding 9/11, Norman Manea's novel introduces us to the protagonist who, like the author himself, is a Romanian professor in exile and who struggles with loneliness, dislocation, the desire to hide. Yet his difficulties and dilemmas are uniquely his own, and his quest for inner peace - the comfort of a lair - is a literary journey of deep originality.

Manea's novel takes elements of Mittel-Europa atmosphere, Byzantine heritage, Jewish-Greek perennial conflict, labyrinths, and libraries to America, where hierarchies of authority are upended, and where his story turns absurd and ultimately tragic. Manea has described himself as "an adventurer trying to humanize his shipwreck wherever he may be". His hero, too, is such an adventurer. Norman Manea's work places him in the literary family of such writers as Bruno Schultz, Robert Musil, and Franz Kafka. Twice a survivor of totalitarian regimes, he often explores the implications of exile, and he illuminates the human tragicomedy with an intensity matched by no other author writing today.

Extract

Read an extract from The Lair by Norman Manea on Yale's blog


Norman Manea is Francis Flourny Professor of European Culture and writer-in-residence at Bard College. A novelist and essayist, he first published in communist Romania in the 1960s, producing a string of socially critical works that led to his expulsion in 1986. His work has been translated into more than 20 languages, and he has received many important cultural and literary prizes, including the MacArthur Award (U.S.), the Nonino Prize (Italy), and the Legion d'honeur (France). The author lives in New York City.

"Great imaginative energy . . . an elaborate, intricate, delicate narrative structure, balanced just so . . . "The Lair" shows us life as a richly incomplete and unresolved experience."--Reginald Gibbons, "TriQuarterly"--Reginald Gibbons "TriQuaterly "