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On the Edge of Reason

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Wikipedia article




'On the Edge of Reason' (Croatian: 'Na rubu pameti') is a 1938 novel by Miroslav Krlea. It is the only Krlea's novel narrated in first person. The work was written under the influence of 'Isuena kaljua' (written circa 19061910) by Janko Poli Kamov.

Synopsis



Taking the form of a first person, unnamed narrator, the work takes place in Zagreb and follows the downfall of a lawyer who previously lived a monotonous life. After attending a party, surrounded by high class, he sharply criticizes the Director-General, after the latter tells an anecdote how he shot four people for trespassing on his property. He is stigmatized by others around him, eventually being brought to court for slander and ending up in prison.

Reception



Following its initial publication in Zagreb, the work was condemned by a number of critics (mainly on the left) for supposedly equating communism (in its Stalinist form) with fascist methods and for not presenting a genuine worldview.[https://books.google.hr/books?id=jS69IRtTA3gC&pg=PA72&dq=on+the+edge+of+reason+krleza&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjz6cLsjIrsAhXskIsKHSA-Do0Q6AEwBHoECAMQAg#v=onepage&q=on%20the%20edge%20of%20reason%20krleza&f=false Ivo Banac Cornell University Press, 1988], pp. 72 It was, however, praised by more nationally oriented critics.

English translations

It was published in English first by Vanguard Press, followed by New Directions Publishing. Susan Sontag called it "one of the great European novels of the first half of the 20th century". A review for 'Publishers Weekly' described Krlea as a "shrewd observer of man as social animal, and his wry, sardonic style fits cleanly into the Eastern European tradition of bureaucratic satire by the likes of Kafka, Karel Capek and Jaroslav Hasek". 'Saturday Review' in its review of the book called Krlea "One of the most accomplished, profound authors in European literature".[https://www.amazon.com/Edge-Reason-Miroslav-Krleza/dp/0811222047 Amazon Editorial Reviews] In a review for 'Boston Phoenix', Paul West notes that "the marvel about this novel is that, for all its restrictedness and Balkan didacticism, it remains in the mind as blatant as a tattooed orange, ever perched close to wit, and empirically crisp".

References




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