This section contains 199 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Hooper, Brad. Review of Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age, by Bohumil Hrabal. Booklist 92, no. 1 (1 September 1995): 39.
In the following review, Hooper suggests that the plotless Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age is not designed for the casual reader.
Hrabal, one of the foremost contemporary Czech writers, has devised a provocative little novel [Dancing Lessons for the Advanced in Age] for special readers. In a breathless monologue—in fact, in one unbroken sentence—an old shoemaker spouts off to a captive audience of young women about his life and ideas. From political history (“his son, the crown prince, was forced to marry Princess Stephanie of Belgium, but he was wild for Vetsera's body, she had these gigantic breasts and eyes”) to morality (“Christ wanted us to love our neighbors, he wanted discipline, not love on the sofa the way some mealy-brained idiots would have it”), the...
This section contains 199 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |