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Georg Letham: Physician and Murderer (Paperback)
$18.47 - Save $2.05 (9%) - RRP $20.52 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 24 hours | |Short Description for Georg LethamMixing Fritz Lang and Alfred Hitchcock with Dostoevsky, a chilling exploration of a deviant mind.
Full description- Publisher: ARCHIPELAGO BOOKS
- Published: 01 August 2010
- Format: Paperback 560 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Contemporary Fiction | Crime
- ISBN 13: 9780980033038 ISBN 10: 0980033039
- Sales rank: 268,152
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Full description for Georg Letham
"Ernst Weiss is in fact one of the few writers who may justly be compared to Franz Kafka...The book belongs to the very most interesting that I have come across in years. . . . One is filled with impressions, excited and gripped by striking existent but unforgettably cast images, characters, and events. By the way: it is all very Austrian."--Thomas Mann "I wonder why Weiss isn't better known here. A doctor as well as a writer, he knew about the body as well as the heart, and you can trust him when he describes how each can act on the other."--Nicholas Lezard, "The Guardian" Georg Letham: Physician and Murderer is a tragicomic and harrowing portrait of a morally defective mind. Written in a highly unreliable first person narrative, this unsung masterwork is an account of a crime and its aftermath: the scientist-hero (or scientist-villain) is tried, sentenced, and deported to a remote island where he is privileged to work as an epidemiologist. He seeks redemption in science, but in spite of himself he is a man of feeling. The book came out of the same fertile literary ground between the wars that produced "The Man Without Qualities" and "The Sleepwalkers"; like those modernist classics and the works of Ernst Weiss' friend, Franz Kafka, Georg Letham: Physician and Murderer is a prescient depiction of a profoundly unsettled society. Ernst Weiss (1882-1940), born in Brunn, Austria (now Brno, Czech Republic), spoke and wrote in German. He was a trained physician and surgeon and served as a ship's doctor for many years. He met Kafka in Berlin in 1913, and was convinced to write full-time. Weiss, a Jew, committed suicide in Paris when the Nazis entered the city in 1940. Joel Rotenberg translated "Chess Story" and "The Post-Office Girl" by Stefan Zweig

