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| Danube (FSG Classics) | 
enlarge | Author: Claudio Magris Creator: Patrick Creagh Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux Category: Book
List Price: £10.47 Buy Used: £9.49 You Save: £0.98 (9%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 1629889
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 416 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.5 x 1.3
ISBN: 0374522456 Dewey Decimal Number: 910 EAN: 9780374522452 ASIN: 0374522456
Publication Date: October 28, 2008 (New: Last 30 Days) Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Brand NEW, UK/Europe Delivery typically 8-14 days.
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Amazon.co.uk Review There is something about the art of travel writing that seems to bring out the very best in the most skilful practitioners. The late Bruce Chatwin produced some of his most incandescent prose in his travel books (some would say even more so than in his novels), and the legacy of this kind of non-pareil work may be found in Claudio Magris' Danube, a book which seamlessly combines sharp descriptive information with prose of the greatest transparency. Magris (whose amazing breadth of knowledge is evident on every page) takes the reader on a colourful journey from the source of the Danube in the Bavarian hills through Austro-Hungary and the Balkans to the Black Sea. At every stage of this voyage from the past to the present, Magris conjures up all the atmospheric associations of the houses, monuments and great personalities (from Marcus Aurelius to Kafka) and, in the process, produces a richly drawn picture of central Europe and a culture rich in the influences of the East and West. As in his celebrated Bohemia, Magris effortlessly incorporates his encyclopaedic knowledge into the kind of book that both recreates a whole continent and deeply inspires the reader to investigate this territory. In fact, to call this a travel book is an inadequate attempt to categorise something that can really only be judged as fine writing.I take a few steps from my bench downhill to the source of the Berg, then, sousing my shoes and socks, climb up through the meadow towards the house. The water glitters in the grass, the spring flows quietly out, the green of the trees is good, and so is the smell. The traveller feels rather clumsy and small, aware of the superior objectivity in which he is framed. Is it possible that all those little trickles in a field are the Danube...which pours out into the Black Sea every year? --Barry Forshaw
Amazon.co.uk Review This is a very Italian book, reminiscent of Italo Calvino or Roberto Calasso. Part history, part philosophy, part travelogue and literature in the richest, most amply rewarding sense. Writing with tremendous exuberance, Claudio Magris has produced a paean to what Hölderlin called "the river of melody"--the Danube, Europe's main artery, and the heart of that elusive but fascinating zone known as Mitteleuropa. Magris is certainly erudite, and not afraid of displaying his erudition, but he also has a fine sense of humour and an eye for the absurd. According to one eminent sedimentologist, he tells us, the source of the Danube is a leaky tap in a remote mountain farmhouse. And of course, the one colour it isn't, ever, is blue. The Hungarians call it blond, apparently. "Muddy yellow" might be more accurate, says the author. His greatest passion, however, is people: poets, singers, murderers, emperors, Dracula, Kafka, Wittgenstein, Josef Mengele--all human life is here. And it makes doubly fascinating reading for having been written back in 1986, when brutes like Ceaucescu were still in power and the iron curtain was still in place, though beginning to tremble slightly now in the wind of history. -- Christopher Hart
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Informative but deeply annoying August 18, 2008 A book based on wide knowledge, deep thought and considerable pretentiousness that adds up to much less than the sum of its parts. Magris offers a cornucopia of information about events and books connected (sometimes rather loosely) with a journey along the Danube; he doesn't provide a lot of context, so to get the best out of the book you really need a degree-level knowledge of German, Austrian and middle-European literature and 19th-20th century history (he's not very interested in earlier periods). Plenty of philosophical musing; some of it interesting, some of it vacuous - you could reverse some of his statements and they would make no more and no less sense - all of it very Italian. The real problem is that there is no real structure, no coherence, no argument or arguments, just a series of random ideas. There is the material here (and even more if you took the whole history and geography of the Danube, not just the literary bits that interest this author) for a really great book, but this is simply too lazy or too self-consciously post-modern, or possibly both. An acquired taste at best; very disappointing.
Overrated 'sacred' travelogue February 23, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm afraid I agree with the less favourable reviewer below - I've now had three tries at this book, and each time find it unfinishable. Part of it is that name-dropping - you feel very much that this is a book by a rather self-important, competitive intellectual for other readers of the same stripe. As such it reads more like earnest literary criticism than anything else, and if there is humour in it, it's the kind to produce intellectual sniffs among those who understand the references rather than actual laughter. It's more an intellectual history of the region rather than something which really evokes the river and its character - if the latter is what you're after, then you'll be disappointed. For a more accessible and enjoyable book about Central Europe, Stephen Brook's 'The Double Eagle' fits the bill well, and is full of atmospheres, characters and information.
Maybe, though, I'll simply have another try at Danube in 20 years' time, see what the fuss is about, and feel I just wasn't ready for it. Or maybe not.
Essential reading October 11, 2005 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Depressing to read disparaging remarks by a couple of reviewers who have failed to see the beauty and humanity in this book. I too was mistakenly expecting a travel book. This is far more than that. Reminds me of Jan Morris' writing which also extends far beyond a superficial description of place. Isn't one of the main points of travel to extend the horizon, to enable you to recognize, accept and appreciate differences between people, including "intellectuals"? Strong taste of sour grapes in these negative reviews: this is an enriching and important read.
Intellectual self-advertising July 12, 2003 7 out of 15 found this review helpful
I am not sure who is to blame more - the learned poet translator or the wannabee poet intellectual author. Like the reviewer above I dragged my way through this book continually affronted by Magris' attempts to blind us with his knowledge and name dropping. This Italian Melvyn Bragg's atempts to provide a book on the diversity of the Danube just ends up as an opportunity for him to namecheck various obscure figures of European thought. HE revels in it along with his bootiful Italian companions. I found it turgid in the extreme. No descriptions of the geography or landscape. There is no heart in this book. Just cold intellectualism. It is dull beyond belief.
Landscape and Memory June 30, 2003 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
I first read this book over 10 years ago and really enjoyed it. I've been re-reading it prior to visiting Eastern Europe and am struck again by how well Magris weaves together ideas, history and a sense of place. So much has happened since the book was published that it is fast becoming an interesting work of history itself. Although the book was well reviewed when it appeared, I wonder if it has been slightly forgotten about now, which would be a shame because the many readers who have enjoyed W G Sebald would, I think, find this equally satisfying.
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