In 2011, I wrote that reading László Krasznahorkai âis a little like seeing a group of people standing in a circle in a town square, apparently warming their hands at a fire, only to discover, as one gets closer, that there is no fire, and that they are gathered around nothing at all.â For many ordinary readers, the idea of entering a fictional world constantly teetering on the edge of a revelation that is always imminent but concealed, in which words pace ceaselessly around reference, and whose favored tool is the long, unstopped sentence, one that takes, say, four hundred pages to unfurl, might constituteâwell, it might constitute precisely the kind of teetering insanity that Krasznahorkai has written so brilliantly and sympathetically about, for so many years. It might constitute what he has called âreality examined to the point of madness.â
Back then, only two of Krasznahorkaiâs novels were available in EnglishââThe Melancholy of Resistanceâ and âWar and War,â which had been published in Hungarian in 1989 and 1999, respectively. Krasznahorkai was already a European phenomenon, especially in Germany, where he was living and where most of his work had been translated. There it was common to hear him described as a likely future Nobel laureate, but, with so little to go on in English, such rumors had the status of palace gossip. Still, âThe Melancholy of Resistanceâ got handed round like superior samizdat. It was Hungarian; it had a superb, mournfully grandiloquent title (hinting knowingly at both the importance of resistance and its inevitable exhaustion); and it carried praise from W. G. Sebald and Susan Sontag.
Beyond the two translated books, there were tantalizing glimpses of others. Krasznahorkaiâs début novel, âSátántangó,â from 1985, still wasnât in English, but one could watch Béla Tarrâs seven-hour movie of the same title, adapted from the novel. (Krasznahorkai has written scripts for six of Tarrâs films.) I had watched maybe two hours of âSátántangóâ but, until the English translation, by the poet George Szirtes, finally appeared, I could only imagine the coiled yet lucid run-on sentences that Tarrâs long tracking shots were presumably doing their cinematic best to emulate:
Anglophone readers were starting to catch up, as a torrent of great work arrived in translation, confirming Krasznahorkaiâs mastery: âSeiobo There Belowâ (2013), âBaron Wenckheimâs Homecomingâ (2019), and, most recently, âHerscht 07769â (2024), probably the most accessible of his novels. (All of the recent fiction has been rendered in fluid, sinuous English by the superb Canadian translator Ottilie Mulzet.) Each is an extraordinary and singular work, and each expands Krasznahorkaiâs range. âBaron Wenckheimâs Homecoming,â for instance, stages a tragicomic, quixotic confrontation between the frustrated and xenophobic inhabitants of a dilapidated provincial Hungarian town and a returning émigré nobleman, the Baron Béla Wenckheim of the title, in whom they have placed their (often reactionary) hopes. But the returning aristocrat is a clapped-out wastrel, and will find no refuge or redemption from his squabbling and inbred countrymen. The novel reminds us of how funny Krasznahorkai can be. âEternityâwill last as long as it lastsâ is the novelâs droll epigraph.
Yet, in some ways, those two early novels that I read back in 2011 establish the peculiar atmosphere of much of the later work: the precarious politics of small towns in Hungary and the former East Germany (nativists, neo-Nazis, law-and-order traditionalists); an uneasy sense of impending apocalypse, both political and metaphysical; and Krasznahorkaiâs fondness for visionary obsessives and holy fools (a world expert on mosses, an archivist who is convinced he has discovered a long-forgotten manuscript and who travels to New York to tell the world about it, a pianist obsessed with the well-tempered tuning of the piano). Despite appearances to the contraryâthe swirling sentences, the feverish intellectionâthere is nothing hermetic about Krasznahorkaiâs work, both old and new, which squarely faces contemporary European reality and its perils, including the tortured dynamics of settlement, movement, and identity.
