LĂĄzĂĄr

âLĂĄzĂĄr is an exquisite and masterly pronouncement that a gifted young writer walks among us.â âPatti Smith An âastonishingâŚdisturbingly dreamlikeâ (Daniel Kehlmann, The Director) debut, inspired by the authorâs own family storyâa gothic, inter-generational family saga capturing the rise and fall of an aristocratic Hungarian family against the backdrop of the two world wars. At the turn of the 20th century, the LĂĄzĂĄrs welcome their newest member in their rural summer estate, surrounded by a menacingly dark, enchanting forest. Lajos von LĂĄzĂĄr is a baby boy with translucent skin and light-blue eyes who looks nothing like the rest of his family. SĂĄndor, the imposing patriarch, is ashamed of his sonâs peculiarity. Ilona finds her baby brother quite ugly. MĂĄria is terrified that her sonâs uncanny resemblance to the stagehand who died a couple weeks earlier might spell disaster. While Imre, SĂĄndorâs brother whose otherworldly foresight is often confused for insanity, is struck by visions of a great catastrophe. Lajosâs birth is emblematic of the many secrets, affairs, and peculiar otherworldly happenings that plague the LĂĄzĂĄrs. As the decades go by, they will continue to fall prey to their desires, leading grand lives, and experiencing even greater tragedies as theyâre swept by the tides of war and revolution that befall their country. But time and again, in the lighter years, extraordinary love and hope shine through. Masterfully written and deeply haunting, LĂĄzĂĄr is a magisterial novel that presents the sweeping history of a nation through the lives of one extraordinary family.
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