Paweł Huelle
Castorp
Castorp
RIGHTS SOLD:
UK: Serpent’s Tail
Germany: C.H. Beck
Hungary: Europa
Slovenia: Litera
Israel: Am oved
Huelle’s Castorp can be read as a variation on the Magic Mountain theme, a sort of phantasy based on the Gdańsk motifs in Thomas Mann’s novel, particularly cherished by the Gdańsk-based writer. The life of Hans Castorp, a student at the Imperial Technical Academy, is monotonous and predictable, until the unexpected outbreak of a feeling for a beautiful, unattainable Polish woman. The ensuing psychic crisis leaves him pondering existential questions and discovering the darker side of life. With the Gdańsk old town, its fin-de-siècle quarter Wrzeszcz and the popular seaside resort Sopot for action settings, the novel is blessed with a distinct, unforgettable atmosphere.
About the author:
Paweł Huelle is a novelist and poet. He was born in Gdańsk in 1957 and graduated in Polish Philology at the University of Gdańsk. He worked as a university lecturer, journalist and director of the Gdańsk Polish Television Centre. Honoured with many prestigious literary awards, Huelle is one of the most successful contemporary Polish writers.
His first novel Who Was David Weiser (1987) was hailed by the critics as “the book of the decade,” “a masterpiece” and “a literary triumph” and has been published, among others, in Germany, Spain, France and Finland. It is a story of a mysterious disappearance of a Jewish boy during his summer vacations. Many years later Dawidek’s friend sets out to investigate the events that came to shape his entire life. The novel has been described as a coming-of-age story, an adventure novel or even as a philosophical treatise.
Like Who Was David Weiser, Huelle’s next two books Stories for a Time of Relocation (1991) and First Love and Other Stories (1996) are set in his home town of Gdańsk and its environs, even though they are concerned with different historical periods and social milieus.
Also by this author:
The Last Supper
Who Was David Weiser?
Mercedes-Benz
The Other Stories
Stories for a Time of Relocation
Cold Sea Tales