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Authors: Simon Winder

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Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe (70 page)

BOOK: Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe
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Bibliography

Two books are not listed in the bibliography: Rebecca West’s
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon
and Claudio Magris’
Danube
. I adored these books when I read them many years ago and can probably blame them for much of my interest in the region, but I have simply been unable to reread them. They make me feel like a space traveller whose rocket is a sort of dustbin powered by sparklers trying to navigate between Jupiter and Saturn. The gravitational power of these books is just too great: even reading an essay by Geoff Dyer
about
Rebecca West’s book was enough to make me feel this whole project was being dragged helplessly into her orbit. So they should not be part of the bibliography, but of course their influence is everywhere, at least at the level of chaotic misrememberings.

I have included a number of titles which I found really interesting but which ended up not directly contributing to the book. I have not included separate listings for all the fiction by Thomas Bernhard, Joseph Roth and Stefan Zweig as it seemed a pointless way to fill up pages: I have just listed a handful of particularly fine examples in the hope that someone somewhere might start with these and then get hooked. Dates are of the editions that I have, therefore not necessarily the first. Spelling of author names is given in the form on the book and is therefore not more broadly consistent.

The real backbone to this book is innumerable tourist information pamphlets, sheets pinned up on church notice boards, pamphlets tucked in with CDs, conversations with individuals vastly better informed than myself, museum booklets and unmanageable piles of evocative, bewildering and entrancing maps – few objects can be more freighted with feeling than a good multilingual map of Transylvania. My two bibles (an obviously contradictory idea) throughout the writing have been a copy of Baedeker’s 1911
Austria-Hungary
guide, generously lent by John Seaton, whose encouragement and friendship have meant so much to me for many years, and Magocsi and Matthews’ superb
Historical Atlas of East Central Europe
, which has answered a thousand questions and raised many more.

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, trans. Leonard Francis Simpson (London, 1862 – Kessinger Publishing digital reprint)
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, trans. Ralph Manheim (New York, 1998)
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, trans. Ralph Manheim (New York, 2002)
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The Good Soldier Švejk
, trans. Cecil Parrott (London, 1973)
Peter Heather,
Empires and Barbarians: Migration, Development and the Birth of Europe
(London, 2009)
BOOK: Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe
3.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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