01851 a2200241 450000100060000000300090000600500170001500800410003202000250007304000130009804100080011108200210011910000450014024500540018526000250023930000280026450400520029252010520034465000170139694200110141399900170142495201680144111390IN-BhIIT20260515125025.0260218b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a9781909631236 (hbk.) aIN-BhIIT aeng a894.51134bKRA/M aKrasznahorkai, LászlóeAuthor927226 aThe manhattan project /cLászló Krasznahorkai bsylph editionsc2017 a87 p. :bill. ;c30 cm. aIncludes bibliographical references. and index. aInternationally celebrated Hungarian novelist László Krasznahorkai has been heralded by Susan Sontag as “the Hungarian master of the apocalypse” and compared favorably to Gogol by W. G. Sebald. A new work by Krasznahorkai is always an event, and The Manhattan Project is no less. As part of Krasznahorkai’s fellowship at the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library, he has been working on a novella inspired by a reading of Moby-Dick. Yet, as he follows in Herman Melville’s footsteps, a second book alongside the original novella took shape. The Manhattan Project is that book. Offering a unique account of a great literary mind at work, Krasznahorkai reveals here the incidences and coincidences that shape his process of writing and creating. The Manhattan Project explores the act of creation through the lens of Krasznahorkai’s encounter with Melville, and it places this vision alongside the work of others who have crossed Melville’s path, both literally and fictionally. aFiction9359 cGEN01 c15333d15333 00102ddc40708GENaCLIITBBSbCLIITBBSd2026-02-05e22g2117.35l1o894.51134 KRA/Mp11390q2026-07-17r2026-05-15 12:50:25s2026-05-15v2900.48w2026-02-05yGEN