Journey by Moonlight by Antal Szerb PDF Free

Journey by Moonlight
by Antal Szerb
Journey by Moonlight Summary
A major classic of 1930s literature, Antal Szerb’s Journey by Moonlight (Utas es Holdvilag) is the fantastically moving and darkly funny story of a bourgeois businessman torn between duty and desire. ‘On the train, everything seemed fine. The trouble began in Venice …’ Mihaly has dreamt of Italy all his life. When he finally travels there on his honeymoon with wife Erszi, he soon abandon her in order to find himself, haunted by old friends from his turbulent teenage days: beautiful, kind Tamas, brash and wicked Janos, and the sexless yet unforgettable Eva. Journeying from Venice to Ravenna, Florence and Rome, Mihaly loses himself in Venetian back alleys and in the Tuscan and Umbrian countryside, driven by an irresistible desire to resurrect his lost youth among Hungary’s Bright Young Things, and knowing that he must soon decide whether to return to the ambiguous promise of a placid adult life, or allow himself to be seduced into a life of scandalous adventure. Journey by Moonlight (Utas es Holdvilag) is an undoubted masterpiece of Modernist literature, a darkly comic novel cut through by sex and death, which traces the effects of a socially and sexually claustrophobic world on the life of one man. Translated from the Hungarian by the renowned and award-winning Len Rix, Antal Szerb’s Journey by Moonlight (first published as Utas es Holdvilag in Hungary in 1937) is the consummate European novel of the inter-war period.
Related Books

The High Window (Philip Marlowe, #3)
Raymond Chandler

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
Milan Kundera

The Merry Wives of Windsor
William Shakespeare

Under the Skin
Michel Faber

On Chesil Beach
Ian McEwan

Independent People
Halldór Laxness

The Grand Inquisitor
Fyodor Dostoevsky

Sandstorm (Sigma Force, #1)
James Rollins

A Slow Fire Burning
Paula Hawkins

A Single Shard: A Newbery Award Winner
Linda Sue Park

The Game of Kings (The Lymond Chronicles, #1)
Dorothy Dunnett

Monday’s Not Coming
Tiffany D. Jackson