Record Details
Book cover

Last impressions

Zoltan Beck is dying. His devoted but long-suffering sons, Ben and Frank, are trying to prepare themselves and their families for Zoltan's eventual departure...but they can't quite bring themselves to believe that the end is really at hand, and neither can Zoltan himself. The head of a family marked by war and tragedy for decades, he "can't stand to be in a room with a miserable person" and has done his best to keep the pain of his refugee past from his beloved children. But as he faces the end of his life, he discovers a heartbreaking secret from the War that will ultimately bring the family together--or irrevocably disrupt it. Set in both mid-20th century Hungary and contemporary Toronto, this is a deeply moving novel that revels in the energy of its extraordinary characters. It is the story of lost love and newfound connections, of a father and his sons desperately reaching out to bridge an ever-widening gap...even as their time together ebbs away.

Book  - 2020
FIC Kerte
2 copies / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9780735238213
  • Physical Description 299 pages ; 21 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2020.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780735238213
Last Impressions
Last Impressions
by Kertes, Joseph
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Kirkus Review

Last Impressions

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Kertes (The Afterlife of Stars, 2017, etc.) returns to familiar terrain in his fifth novel, about a Hungarian Jewish Holocaust survivor nearing the end of his life who, with the encouragement of his son, reluctantly revisits his mysterious, tragic past. Zoltan Beck does not like to linger on the past. "He's a forgetter," one of his granddaughters notes. "He likes to forget." Having left Hungary in the 1950s and made his way to Toronto, Zoltan would rather enjoy the pleasures of life than dwell on his painful history, which he has mostly kept from his three sons. Even he does not know the circumstances of his beloved older brother's death amid the chaos of their escape from a labor camp. But as he approaches the end of his life, his son Ben begins to search--and encourages him to search--for answers to unasked questions. This quest ultimately leads the pair back to Budapest, where they must uncover the truth at last. The premise of the novel is not particularly original, but in the right author's hands, stories like these--no matter how frequently told--can be arresting and innovative. Sadly, that is not the case here. Although the novel has occasional moments of genuine tenderness, many of its emotional crescendos feel forced. When Zoltan discovers long-lost family in Budapest, for instance, his embrace of these strangers seems utterly at odds with every other aspect of his character. Furthermore, the female characters are flat and underdeveloped, the dialogue often strikes a false chord, and the shape of the plot is predictable. Kertes does manage to incorporate bursts of humor into otherwise heavy subject matter, and he uses music and literary references cleverly. But these incidental assets ultimately do little to improve a story that is hackneyed and sentimental. Jewish generational memory and trauma can be a literary gold mine, but what Kertes has unearthed is only gold-plated. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9780735238213
Last Impressions
Last Impressions
by Kertes, Joseph
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Publishers Weekly Review

Last Impressions

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Kertes (The Afterlife of Stars) delivers a bittersweet tale of a Jewish Hungarian survivor of WWII. Zoltan Beck immigrated to Toronto with his young family during the revolution of 1956. Now, in 2012, Zoltan's wife has recently died and Zoltan, who has colon cancer, is being looked after by his son, Ben, a teacher, and Ben's wife, Lucy. Ben is patient with his father, who is exasperating in his will to maintain his independence. Zoltan's travails in the present are interspersed with flashbacks to his experiences during the war, when he and his older brother, Bela, were transported to a forced labor camp where Bela's talent as a pianist earned them special treatment. But at war's end, Zoltan and Bela were separated. Bela's fate is finally revealed as Ben and a dying Zoltan travel to Budapest for a final reckoning with their family history. Kertes dramatizes the indignities faced by a person with compromised health, from having one's driver's license revoked to running into unexpected difficulties during a colonoscopy. Zoltan's hilarious and heartbreaking story is a satisfying blend of matters domestic and historical. Agent: Julie Stevenson, Massie & McQuilikin Literary Agents. (Mar.)