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Koestler: The Indispensable Intellectual Main [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 720 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 243x160x60 mm, kaal: 1065 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: Faber & Faber
  • ISBN-10: 0571138535
  • ISBN-13: 9780571138531
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 720 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 243x160x60 mm, kaal: 1065 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: Faber & Faber
  • ISBN-10: 0571138535
  • ISBN-13: 9780571138531
Best known as a novelist and author of the classic Darkness at Noon, as well as notable essays (`The Yogi' and `The Commissar'), autobiographies (Arrow in the Blue, The Invisible Writing), and scientific works (The Act of Creation, The Ghost in the Machine), Koestler was one of the most fascinating and controversial intellectuals of his day, involved in and commenting on many seminal events of the twentieth century. Born in Budapest and educated in Vienna, he moved to Palestine in the 1920s as a committed Zionist; in the 1930s he joined the German Gornmunist Party and travelled to the Soviet Union; as a foreign correspondent, he was imprisoned and sentenced to death in Franco's Spain; he escaped occupied France by joining the French Foreign Legion; and in the 1940s was one of the first to warn of the atrocities of the Jewish Holocaust. Having turned against Communism, he gained international fame with his exposure of the show trials in Darkness at Noon. Koestler passionately opposed the death penalty but advocated legal euthanasia, and in his later years became fascinated with parapsychology.

Drawing on over a hundred interviews and a wealth of new sources (private diaries, unpublished letters, archives of the CIA, MI5, the French Surete, the German and Soviet Communist Parties), Michael Scammell gives a nuanced and unsentimental account of Koestler's turbulent public and private life: his drug use, manic depression, the frenetic womanizing that led to an accusation of rape, and the shocking suicide pact with his third wife in 1983. But he also makes the case for Koestler's stature as a major autobiographer and essayist as well as novelist. In doing so he creates a complex and indelible portrait of this brilliant, unpredictable and talented writer, memorably described by one MI5 interrogator as `one-third blackguard, one-third lunatic, and one-third genius'.

Best known as the author of the classic "Darkness at Noon", Koestler was one of the most influential and controversial intellectuals, involved in and commenting on almost every political movement of the twentieth century. This title gives a full account of Koestler's turbulent private life.

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Award-winning author Michael Scammell's Koestler: The Indispensable Intellectual is the first authorized biography of Arthur Koestler.
Prologue xv
Koestler Family Tree xxiii
PART ONE A LONG APPRENTICESHIP
The Author as Journalist (1905-1936)
Chapter One Beginnings
3(10)
Chapter Two A Budapest Childhood
13(10)
Chapter Three Rise, Jew, Rise
23(10)
Chapter Four ZIONIST
33(13)
Chapter Five A RUNAWAY AND A FUGITIVE
46(10)
Chapter Six First Steps in Journalism
56(10)
Chapter Seven Hello to Berlin
66(11)
Chapter Eight In the Gale of History
77(11)
Chapter Nine Red Days
88(13)
Chapter Ten Anti-Fascist Crusader
101(15)
Chapter Eleven Marking Time
116(9)
Chapter Twelve Prisoner of Franco
125(15)
Chapter Thirteen Turning Point
140(15)
PART TWO FAME AND INFAMY
The Author as Novelist (1936-1946)
Chapter Fourteen The God that Failed
155(9)
Chapter Fifteen No New Certainties
164(9)
Chapter Sixteen Darkness visible
173(10)
Chapter Seventeen Scum of the Earth
183(10)
Chapter Eighteen Darkness Unveiled
193(10)
Chapter Nineteen In Crumpled Battledress
203(11)
Chapter Twenty The Novelist's Temptations
214(13)
Chapter Twenty-One Identity crisis
227(11)
Chapter Twenty-Two Commissar Or Yogi?
238(12)
Chapter Twenty-Three Return to Palestine
250(12)
Chapter Twenty-Four Welsh Interlude
262(11)
Chapter Twenty-Five The logic of the Ice Age
273(14)
PART THREE LOST ILLUSIONS
The Author as Activist (1946-1959)
Chapter Twenty-Six Adventures Among the Existentialists
287(12)
Chapter Twenty-Seven French Lessons
299(14)
Chapter Twenty-Eight Discovering America
313(12)
Chapter Twenty-Nine Farewell to Zionism
325(12)
Chapter Thirty A Married Man
337(13)
Chapter Thirty-One To the Barricades
350(12)
Chapter Thirty-Two The Congress for Cultural Freedom
362(9)
Chapter Thirty-Three Back to the USA
371(11)
Chapter Thirty-Four Politically Unreliable
382(12)
Chapter Thirty-Five The Language of Destiny
394(10)
Chapter Thirty-Six The Phantom Chase
404(15)
Chapter Thirty-Seven I killed Her
419(8)
Chapter Thirty-Eight Cassandra Grows Hoarse
427(16)
Chapter Thirty-Nine Matters of Life and Death
443(14)
PART FOUR ASTRIDE THE TWO CULTURES
The Author as Polymath (1959-1983)
Chapter Forty Cosmic Reporter
457(13)
Chapter Forty-One The Squire of Alpbach
470(8)
Chapter Forty-Two Retreat from Rationalism?
478(11)
Chapter Forty-Three A Naive and Skeptical Disposition
489(13)
Chapter Forty-Four Seeking a Cure
502(14)
Chapter Forty-Five Wunderkind
516(11)
Chapter Forty-Six Chance Governs All
527(12)
Chapter Forty-Seven The-koestler Problem
539(12)
Chapter Forty-Eight An Easy Way of Dying
551(15)
Epilogue 566(7)
Acknowledgments 573(6)
Select bibliography 579(8)
Notes and sources 587(80)
Index 667
Michael Scammell won the Los Angeles Times Book Award for biography in 1985 for his life of Solzhenitsyn, and is the translator of Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Nabokov, and Solzhenitsyn, among many others. He is a former president of PEN American Center and a vice-president of International PEN, and has written regularly for the New York Times Book Review, the New York Review of Books and the New Republic. He teaches non-fiction writing and translation in the School of the Arts at Columbia.