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Reluctantly accepting a pregnant stray into their post-World War II Hungarian home, Mr. and Mrs. Ancsas quickly accept her as a member of the family, which is torn by the loss of their son, Mr. Ancsa's involuntary disappearance in the wake of a communist political crackdown, and Mrs. Ancsa's lonely vigil over the course of five years. Reprint.

Produktbeschreibung
Reluctantly accepting a pregnant stray into their post-World War II Hungarian home, Mr. and Mrs. Ancsas quickly accept her as a member of the family, which is torn by the loss of their son, Mr. Ancsa's involuntary disappearance in the wake of a communist political crackdown, and Mrs. Ancsa's lonely vigil over the course of five years. Reprint.
Autorenporträt
Tibor Déry (1894–1977) was born in Budapest into a prosperous family of partly Jewish descent. In 1919, he joined the Communist Party and served in the ill-fated revolutionary government of Béla Kun, which collapsed before the end of the year. For much of the next fifteen years he lived in exile, returning to Hungary for good in 1935. Though initially well-regarded by Hungary’s post–World War II Communist government, by 1953 Déry had been expelled from the party for his criticism of its increasingly repressive policies. He then supported Imre Nagy’s reformist government and, after the Soviet suppression of the 1956 uprising, was sentenced to nine years in prison. Writers around the world (including Camus, Sartre, E.M. Forster, Rebecca West, and Alberto Moravia) rallied on his behalf, and in 1960 Déry was not only granted amnesty but allowed to publish and travel in relative freedom. Among Déry’s major works are Love and Other Stories, the novel The Unfinished Sentence, and an autobiography, No Verdict. George Szirtes is a Hungarian-born English poet and translator. He received the T.S. Eliot Prize for Reel (2004), and his New and Collected Poems were published in 2008. As a translator of poetry and fiction he has won a variety of prizes and awards, including the European Poetry Translation Prize and, in fact, the Déry Prize. Edward Hyams won the Scott Moncrieff Translation Prize for Joan of Arc: By Herself and Her Witnesses by Regine Pernoud.