89 Words followed by Prague, A Disapp..., Milan Kundera
89 Words followed by Prague, A Disapp..., Milan Kundera
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89 Words followed by Prague, A Disappearing Poem

Author: Milan Kundera

Narrator: Charles Constant

Unabridged: 2 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Harper

Published: 10/07/2025


Synopsis

Two newly translated works from one of the greatest literary writers and thinkers of the modern age, available together in English for the first time.Translating a work from its original language can be complicated; it’s a complex art that can easily mar and twist the intent and meaning of a writer’s words. Precise translations were of particular importance to Milan Kundera, who did not live to see all his books published in his native Czech language. Words, for Kundera, were the object of constant scrutiny.This fascinating volume includes two Kundera works from the 1980s, originally written for the now defunct French magazine Le Debat, which have never been available in in English. In “89 Words,” Kundera wryly recounts the many pitfalls in reading his own poorly translated works. When a friend of Kundera’s asked him about the words he considered the most—the ones he fretted over and loved—Kundera created a personal dictionary—his “89 Words.” This discerning essay, steeped in his signature barbed cheekiness, showcases his casually gutting philosophical reflections on what it means to be a writer in translation—the exile of life and art in another language.In the second work, “Prague: A Disappearing Poem,” Kundera writes with a wistfulness and despair for his ever-more-distant home, offering an intimate look at the specificity of his native culture: the richness of a heritage born in a “small nation” but whose significance is universal. Here, like in A Kidnapped West, we find the double condemnation of “Soviet civilization,” which had suffocated and persecuted Czech culture, and of Western Europe, which refused to neither acknowledge Kundera’s culture or understand it.Prefaced by lauded French historian Pierre Nora and translated from the French by award-winning Matt Reeck, these two texts return us to Kundera’s much-missed living presence. Subtle, alive, and full of wit and irony, 89 Words followed by Prague, A Disappearing Poem is an homage to a literary legend and a reminder of just how prescient his words and insights are today.

About Milan Kundera

The Franco-Czech novelist Milan Kundera (1929–2023) was born in Brno and lived in France, his second homeland, since 1975 until his death. He is the author of the novels The Joke, Life Is Elsewhere, Farewell Waltz, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, The Unbearable Lightness of Being, and Immortality, and the short story collection Laughable Loves—all originally in Czech. His more recent novels, Slowness, Identity, Ignorance, and The Festival of Insignificance, as well as his nonfiction works, The Art of the Novel, Testaments Betrayed, The Curtain, and Encounter, were originally written in French.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Maurizio on February 22, 2025

"Bellezza, l’ultima possibile vittoria dell’uomo che non ha più speranza. Bellezza nell’arte: luce repentinamente accesa del mai-detto. Questa luce che si irradia dai grandi romanzi, il tempo non riesce a offuscarla: poiché infatti l’esistenza umana viene costantemente dimenticata dall’uomo, le scop......more

Goodreads review by Tymianek on November 26, 2025

In my kundERA......more

Goodreads review by Sofiya Gecheva on October 04, 2024

"МУЗУМРАЗЕЦ. Не е страшно да нямаш усет за изкуството. Можеш да не четеш Пруст, да не слушаш Шуберт и пак да си живееш спокойно. Само че музомразецът не си живее спокойно. Той се чувства унизен от съществуването на нещо, което не разбира, затова го мрази. Съществува популярно музомразие, така както......more

Goodreads review by Pablo on October 20, 2025

Years after reading Milan Kundera for the last time, his 89 Words is like "fresh air". From someone who constantly thinks about everything, all the time, to someone who is just the same. On the first page, of this new book, Kundera writes: "Translation is like a woman: either beautiful or faithful." I......more

Goodreads review by Marina on September 22, 2024

Un libro che è un ritratto di Praga, della sua storia culturale e delle figure di spicco che l’hanno rappresentata nelle diverse arti. Dopo l’invasione russa della Cecoslovacchia, avvenuta nel 1968 Kundera descrive Praga come «un foglio di carta in fiamme / dove scompare la poesia». Infatti, il regim......more