Kaputt (novel)

1944 novel by Curzio Malaparte From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kaputt is a 1944 autobiographical novel by the Italian writer Curzio Malaparte.

TranslatorCesare Foligno
LanguageItalian
PublisherEditore Casella
Quick facts Author, Translator ...
Kaputt
Book cover for Kaputt (1946 English language edition)
AuthorCurzio Malaparte
TranslatorCesare Foligno
LanguageItalian
PublisherEditore Casella
Publication date
1944
Publication placeItaly
Published in English
1946
Pages645
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Plot

The book was inspired by Malaparte's experiences as a war correspondent at the Eastern Front of World War II. It presents itself as Malaparte's personal witness account of intense violence and cruelty, but the content is largely fictional.[1]

Reception

The book was an international success. Already at the publication, several European critics received the book's narrator as a fictionalised author persona, and the book as an attempt from Malaparte to position himself after Italy's defeat and his own past as a fascist sympathiser.[1] When the English translation was published in 1946, Kirkus Reviews received it as a true account and called it "a subtly brilliant piece of writing" where Malaparte is "whipping the sensibilities to a sharp awareness of the degradation of Europe, of the utter collapse of morality, integrity, and so on".[2]

Translations

The book was translated into Lithuanian by Tomas Venclova.[3]

References

Further reading

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