Kaddis a meg nem született gyermekért. (Kaddish for an Unborn Child)
Budapest: Magveto, 1990. First editon, 195+[4] p. Inscribed copy for András Zoltán Bán, critic, translator and writer. Kertesz once remarked, "Ban is a literary pit bull." More
Budapest: Magveto, 1990. First editon, 195+[4] p. Inscribed copy for András Zoltán Bán, critic, translator and writer. Kertesz once remarked, "Ban is a literary pit bull." More
Budapest: Magvetö, [2002]. Signed by Imre Kertész on title page in blue ink. In publisher’s cardboard with the original, typographically illustrated dust jacket, printed in color. 359, (1) p. Signed copy of Kertész’ 1992 fictional diary, Gályanapló (Galley Diary). Imre Kertész (1929–2016) was a Jewish Hungarian writer. In 2002..... More
Budapest: Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, 1977. First edition. In publisher’s illustrated hard paper, with the original illustrated dust jacket, designed by István Engel Tevan. 218, (6) p. First edition of Kertész’s second book. Contains two short stories “A nyomkereső” and “Detektívtörténet”, published in English under the titles “The Pathseeker” and “Detective Story”..... More
Budapest: Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, 1975. First edition. In original hard paper. With original illustrated dust cover. With Kertész’s photographic portrait on front flap. 291, (3) p. The chief novel of Imre Kertész (b. 1929), the Hungarian Holocaust survivor, who gained the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2002 for this novel... More
Budapest: Szepirodalmi, 1985. Second edition. In original illustrated paper. 293 p. The chief novel of Imre Kertész (b. 1929), the Hungarian Holocaust survivor, who gained the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2002 for this novel. “Fateless” is a quasi-autobiographical novel that describes a 15 year-old Hungarian boy’s tragic..... More