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SOURCE: Boaz, Amy. Review of Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age, by Bohumil Hrabal. Library Journal 120, no. 12 (July 1995): 80.
In the following review, Boaz suggests that Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age is “Rabelaisian,” calling attention to its playful use of vernacular storytelling.
In this playful, Rabelaisian narrative [Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age] by the prominent Czech writer Hrabal (The Little Town Where Time Stood Still, Pantheon, 1993), a shoemaker, as “sensitive as Mozart and an admirer of the European Renaissance,” unwinds a yarn about his life and loves for the benefit of the “beauties.” He is chivalrous, our narrator—his maxims for the proper life include the advice “not to live in a pigsty and keep the ladies supplied with flowers”—and he tells each story in one stuffed, seamless sentence that embraces the high and low of life, rabbit breeders and priests, soldiers and...
This section contains 238 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |