Harman Patil (Editor)

Europe Central

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
2005

ISBN
  
0-670-03392-8

Author
  
William T. Vollmann

Publisher
  
Viking Press

3.9/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
832 pp

Originally published
  
2005

Genre
  
Historical drama

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Media type
  
Print (hardcover and paperback)

Awards
  
National Book Award for Fiction

Nominations
  
National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction

Similar
  
William T Vollmann books, National Book Award for Fiction winners, Historical drama books

Europe Central (2005) is a novel by William T. Vollmann that won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction.

Contents

Plot

It is set in central Europe during the 20th century and examines a vast array of characters, ranging from generals to martyrs, officers to poets, traitors to artists and musicians. It deals with the moral decisions made by people in the most testing of times and offers a perspective on human actions during wartime. Vollmann makes use of many historical figures as characters including composer Dmitri Shostakovich, artist Käthe Kollwitz, film director Roman Karmen, poet Anna Akhmatova, SS officer Kurt Gerstein, as well as German general Friedrich Paulus and Soviet general Andrey Vlasov.

In an afterword, Vollmann admits that, while the book is heavily researched and mostly features real people, the work should be regarded as fiction. He calls it "a series of parables about famous, infamous and anonymous European moral actors at moments of decision." Though largely true to history, a number of anecdotes or details are created by the author, such as the "imaginary love triangle" between Shostakovich, Roman Karmen, and Elena Konstantinovskaya.

Reception

The Times Literary Supplement wrote that Vollmann "has turned to the historical novel and made it his own, fashioning a work which is cinematic in scope, epic in ambition and continuously engaging, shows that he is one of the most important and fascinating writers of our time."

The New York Times Book Review described it at his "most welcoming work, possibly his best book… part novel and part stories, virtuoso historical remembrance and focused study of violence."

References

Europe Central Wikipedia