Homo Faber
| Max Frisch |
Homo Faber by Max Frisch (Penguin Modern Classics) — UNESCO engineer Walter Faber’s rationalist worldview is shattered when coincidences reveal a suppressed truth about his past. A gripping tragedy and parable about the limits of the technological mind, written in prose perfectly calibrated to its narrator. Trans. Michael Bullock.
| Penguin Modern Classics | |
| რბილი ყდა | |
| ინგლისური |
46.00 ₾
მარაგში
| რაოდენობა | ფასი | ფასდაკლება |
|---|---|---|
| 3-9 | 39.10 ₾ | 15% |
| 10+ | 32.20 ₾ | 30% |
ანოტაცია
Walter Faber is a man of the modern world at its most confident: a UNESCO engineer who believes in measurement, precision, rational analysis, and the systematic application of intelligence to problems. Feeling, intuition, fate — these are not categories he finds useful. Then a series of coincidences begins. Each one is explicable. Together, they lead him to a truth about his own past that he has suppressed for twenty years — and to a catastrophe he could not have calculated or prevented.
Max Frisch’s Homo Faber is one of the essential European novels of the postwar period: a gripping story that is also a philosophical parable about the limits of the rational worldview, and about what happens to people who have trained themselves not to feel. Faber’s narration is itself a kind of performance of his character — dry, precise, increasingly cracking under the pressure of a reality that refuses to be engineered away — and Frisch’s control of that narration is masterly.
Michael Bullock’s translation makes this demanding novel fully accessible. Short, gripping, and deeply unsettling. Published by Penguin Modern Classics.
მახასიათებლები
| ავტორი | Max Frisch |
|---|---|
| გამომცემლობა | Penguin Modern Classics |
| გვერდების რაიოდენობა | 236 |
| ISBN | 9780141188669 |
| ყდის ტიპი | რბილი ყდა |
| ენა | ინგლისური |
| ფორმატი | 198 x 129 mm |
















