This 1987 Hungarian novel in the modernist tradition combines emotionality and literary quality in the story of two women, a writer and her housekeeper.
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This 1987 Hungarian novel in the modernist tradition combines emotionality and literary quality in the story of two women, a writer and her housekeeper.
Magda Szabo is contemporary Hungary's foremost woman novelist.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dramatic & charismatic,
By Lili_K (Hungary) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Door (Hardcover)
At a first glance the novel seems to be simple: the book is about the relationship between two women: an author and her housekeeper. However, if you stuck strictly to this statement, you'd be oversimplifying the book and what it is about. As you go through the pages events of the past in flashes come to the surface, making the end shocking and dramatic.
Magda Szabo is one of the most charismatic writers of our time: her books are highly popular in Hungary and abroad. Her books have been translated into more than 20 languages. Her charisma can be strongly felt in her novels as well. Reading her books is like putting the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle together: at the end all pieces come to their place and the reader is left breathless with the dramatic and cruel fate the characters are/were bound to face. It is fate looming over people, unavoidable in Szabo's books, arising from the circumstances and personality of the characters.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The little lady downstairs,
This review is from: The Door (Hardcover)
This is a story that could be the story of anyone's forgotten grandmother. And much more besides. Set in Budapest, Magda Szabo's writer-narrator tells us, in a style that literally pours itself out on the page and won't let go of the reader, of her relationship with the little lady downstairs, the old concierge who started out as her housekeeper and ended up ruling her life. It is a bewildering tale of love-hate relationships, set against a vague backcloth of communist Hungary and the aftermath of world war II; it is also an analysis of guilt and an apology for tolerance of people's varied beliefs, and the final scenes make one wonder if the narrator isn't apologising for her country and not only herself. For once also, here is a novel which accords an important place to the role of animals in our lives. Viola, the dog, has an important part to play, and the detailed and profound observation of animal behaviour is perhaps one of the most remarkable aspects of the book.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Something New,
This review is from: The Door (Paperback)
Who would have thought that a story about an old woman who dies would be interesting? Old women die all the time. And I certainly never would have believed that the life of an orderly writer in front of her typewriter would hold anyone's attention ... especially mine. But I was flipping the pages of this novel faster than I would any Kootz book and crying over the tragedies of this character as much as any of Charlotte Bronte's.
There may be nothing new under the sun, including plots and characters, but good writing can make something old something powerful--and excellent fiction opens our eyes so we see reality truthfully.
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