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Voyage to Kazohinia

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SKU:
750
Condition:
Like New
Format:
Paperback, 352 pages
Publisher:
New Europe Books, 2012
Edition:
First Edition, First Printing

A page-turning dystopian classic that stands alongside Brave New World and Gulliver's Travels.

Voyage to Kazohiniais a tour de force of twentieth-century literature--and it is here published in English for the first time outside of Hungary. Sándor Szathmári's comical novel chronicles the travels of a modern Gulliver on the eve of World War II. A shipwrecked English ship's surgeon finds himself on an unknown island whose inhabitants, the Hins, live a technologically advanced existence without emotions, desires, arts, money, or politics. Soon unhappy amid this bleak perfection, Gulliver asks to be admitted to the closed settlement of the Behins, beings with souls and atavistic human traits. He has seen nothing yet. A massively entertaining mix of satire and science fiction, Voyage to Kazohinia has seen half a dozen editions in Hungary in the seventy years since its original publication and remains the country's most popular cult classic.

Editorial Reviews

"A page-turner for both the adult as well as the adolescent reader, Voyage to Kazohinia is a classic waiting to be discovered by every literate person. This newly translated and profoundly transformative novel ought to be taught in high schools and colleges across the English-speaking world."  David Mandler, PhD, English Teacher at Stuyvesant High School, New York City

"Massively entertaining!...Make room for the new Gulliver. He has brought home news out of Kazohinia."  Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and Out of Oz

"Written in 1935, Voyage to Kazohinia is a strikingly postmodern and open-ended dystopia that rightfully belongs among the twentieth-century classics of the genre. And it is unique in being less a strident political cautionary tale than it is a brilliantly mordant reflection on government, reason, and language." ―Carter Hanson, Associate Professor of English, Valparaiso University 

"[A] dystopian cult classic....Gulliver washes up on the island of Kazohinia, which is populated by bizarre inhabitants...whose sense of morality and society force [him] to reconsider his own understanding of life, love, and death."  ―Publishers Weekly

About the Author

Sándor Szathmári (1897-1974) was among the most extraordinary and elusive figures in twentieth-century Hungarian literature. The author of two published novels and several story collections in his native tongue, he is best known for Voyage to Kazohina—which, titled Kazohiniaon most editions in Hungary, has been treasured by generations of readers. 

Szathmári spent much of his career as a mechanical engineer; this, together with his limited oeuvre, the biting satire of his magnum opus, and his political persuasions—which ranged from an early, ambivalent affiliation with communism to anticommunism as Hungary became a communist dictatorship—kept him ever on the margins of the officially sanctioned literary establishment. 

A central figure in Hungary's Esperanto movement for decades, Szathmári published his writings—including, most famously, Voyage to Kazohinia—in his own Esperanto-language editions, ensuring him a measure of international recognition and literary freedom during the communist era.