Thomas Bernhard (1931-1989) has been hailed by Gabriel Josipovici
as 'Austria's finest postwar writer' and by George Steiner as 'one
of the masters of contemporary European fiction.' Faber Finds is
proud to reissue a selection of four of Bernhard's finest novels.
Concrete (1982) is a brilliant and haunting tale of
procrastination, failure, and despair: the story of Rudolph, a
Viennese musicologist, who neglects the work he is meant to be
producing in favour of this dark and grotesquely funny account of
small woes writ large, of profound horrors detailed and rehearsed to
the point of distraction: from a meddling sister and a house that he
hates, to an 'illness' he carefully nurses, his own very real
writer's block, and an 'escape' to Majorca which brings him no
release from himself.
'Masterful... A book of mysterious dark beauty.' John Rechy, Los
Angeles Times
A masterpiece.' New Yorker
Thomas Bernhard (1931-1989) won many of the most prestigious literary
prizes in Europe, including the Austrian State Prize, the Breman and
Bruchner Prizes and Le Pix Seguier. Among his novels are The Loser,
Concrete, and Extinction, all of which are available in Faber Finds.