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Night Train to Lisbon

A Novel

By Pascal Mercier, Barbara Harshav (Translator)

(19)

| Hardcover | 9780802118585

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Book Description

A huge international best seller, this ambitious novel plumbs the depths of our shared humanity to offer up a breathtaking insight into life, love, and literature itself. A major hit in Germany that went on to become one of Europe’s biggest literary blockbusters in the last five years, Night TContinue

A huge international best seller, this ambitious novel plumbs the depths of our shared humanity to offer up a breathtaking insight into life, love, and literature itself. A major hit in Germany that went on to become one of Europe’s biggest literary blockbusters in the last five years, Night Train to Lisbon is an astonishing novel, a compelling exploration of consciousness, the possibility of truly understanding another person, and the ability of language to define our very selves. Raimund Gregorius is a Latin teacher at a Swiss college who one day—after a chance encounter with a mysterious Portuguese woman—abandons his old life to start a new one. He takes the night train to Lisbon and carries with him a book by Amadeu de Prado, a (fictional) Portuguese doctor and essayist whose writings explore the ideas of loneliness, mortality, death, friendship, love, and loyalty. Gregorius becomes obsessed by what he reads and restlessly struggles to comprehend the life of the author. His investigations lead him all over the city of Lisbon, as he speaks to those who were entangled in Prado’s life. Gradually, the picture of an extraordinary man emerges—a doctor and poet who rebelled against Salazar’s dictatorship.

Critics

  • Book Review: Night Train to Lisbon by Pascal Mercier Share

    Let me say from the outset that Night Train to Lisbon is perhaps one of those books in which I cannot make up my mind, whether I like it or not. There were points about the book that I especially liked, but there were also aspects of the book that I ... (read full critics)

    blogcritics published on Sat, 16 Jul 2011

  • Night Train to Lisbon By Pascal Mercier

    This Tip of the Ice Pick goes to Swiss writer Pascal Mercier for his darkly dreamlike Night Train to Lisbon. First published in German in 2004, Night Train to Lisbon has already been translated into 15 languages and appears in English courtesy of tra ... (read full critics)

    bookpage published on Thu, 16 Sep 2010

2 Reviews

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  • I read a book about a man reading a book. And the book he was reading was about a man who read a lot of books. Gregorius (the man reading the book) has lead the quiet and insignificant life that most of us will discover to have lived; his only eccentricity was his passion for classic books and trans ... (continue)

    I read a book about a man reading a book. And the book he was reading was about a man who read a lot of books. Gregorius (the man reading the book) has lead the quiet and insignificant life that most of us will discover to have lived; his only eccentricity was his passion for classic books and translation ancient Greek and Hebrew. A strange episode brings him to read a book in Portuguese, a language he does not know. Therefore Gregorius is not just reading, as he needs first to undergo the effort of translation; Gregorius is basically giving to the book the attention that every writer would dream of. Prado, the man who has written the book, could not care less. Writing for Prado was just an observation tool, a mechanism and a ritual in order to give meaning to his own life. The relation between reader and writer is therefore sublime, as Prado is basically giving color to Gregorius' life, and Gregorius is apparently the only man on earth really knowing Prado. A good book, intense, well built. The characters are strong, and able to create links beyond space and time between them, by the process of writing and reading. However not an excellent book, I am afraid. To make his story plausible, Mercier (the author of the book), has to use well-known mechanisms (for instance all-live savings well invested to allow Gregorius to spend a large amount of time doing nothing, or the fact that every person was always willing to give Gregorius a good interview, or the omnipresence of chess-game); this failed attempt to plausibility is futile and unnecessary, and subtract energy to the book. However, the existential questions which are posed by this atheist preacher, the deep investigation of the human soul, let us forgive and forget those literary blunders and support us in our mid-life crisis.

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    Peppuzzo said on Jan 15, 2010 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback

  • 'A treat for the mind. One of the best books I have read in a long time' - Isabel Allende. And I totally agree with her comment. Although it's rather long and some parts a bit phylosophical, I read it in just over a week and I could hardly put it down. It tells the story of Raimund Gregorius, a Swis ... (continue)

    'A treat for the mind. One of the best books I have read in a long time' - Isabel Allende. And I totally agree with her comment. Although it's rather long and some parts a bit phylosophical, I read it in just over a week and I could hardly put it down. It tells the story of Raimund Gregorius, a Swiss, a timid middle-aged professor of ancient languages. One morning on his way to school he meets a mysterious Portuguese woman in a red coat and later the same that day he finds hidden in a dusty corner of a second-hand bookshop the journal of an enigmatic Portuguese aristocrat, Amadeu de Prado. All of a sudden he is seized by a restlessness that drives him to abandon his classroom then and there - shocking his students, and surprising even himself and embarking on a journey that will lead him to Lisbon and searching into Amadeu’s life. My only regret is not to have read it in its original German language.

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    Lunarossa said on May 6, 2009 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback

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