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 Location:  Home » Books » General AAS » The Darkroom of Damocles A Novel: A NovelDecember 2, 2008  
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The Darkroom of Damocles A Novel: A Novel
The Darkroom of Damocles A Novel: A Novel
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List Price: $27.95
Buy New: $16.65
You Save: $11.30 (40%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $7.92

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(based on 1 reviews)
Sales Rank: 847963
Category: Book

Author: Willem Frederik Hermans
Publisher: Overlook Hardcover
Studio: Overlook Hardcover
Manufacturer: Overlook Hardcover
Label: Overlook Hardcover
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 400
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.7 x 1.4

ISBN: 1590200624
Dewey Decimal Number: 839.31364
EAN: 9781590200629
ASIN: 1590200624

Publication Date: May 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Beyond Sleep
  • Netherland: A Novel
  • Indignation
  • The Discovery of Heaven
  • To Siberia: A Novel

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

During the German occupation of Holland, tobacconist Henri Osewoudt is visited by Dorbeck. Dorbeck is Osewoudt's spitting image in reverse. Henri is blond and beardless, with a high voice; Dorbeck is dark-haired, and his voice deep.

Dorbeck gives Osewoudt a series of dangerous assignments: helping British agents and eliminating traitors. But the assassinations get out of hand, and when Osewoudt discovers that his wife denounced him to the Germans, he kills her too.

Having survived all the dangers, at the end of the war, Osewoudt is himself taken for a traitor and captured. He cannot prove that he received his assignments from Dorbeck. Worse, he cannot prove that Dorbeck ever existed. When he develops a roll of film that should show a photograph of the two of them together, the picture is a dud. He flees from prison in panic and is dishonourably shot on the run.

The story of Osewoudt's fateful wanderings through a sadistic universe is thrilling. Is Osewoudt hero or villain? Or is he a psychopath, driven by delusions? It is the impossibility of ascertaining whether Osewoudt was on the "right" side or the "wrong" side - the moral issue of the Second World War in a nutshell - that makes Hermans' novel as breathtaking now as when it was written a decade after the war.




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Slippery Identity   May 26, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

If you like Hermans and enjoyed Beyond Sleep, you will enjoy this book as well. The slippery identities of the the main character (Henri Osewoudt) and his doppelganger (Dorbeck) are at the heart of this novel about the WW II Underground in Holland--nothing is certain; everything shifts; and there is more than a touch of Kafka here. I had ordered it from Amazon.uk last year after reading Beyond Sleep and read half of it on the plane to Mongolia, only to discover on arrival that I had left it at Inchon Airport. So much did I enjoy it that I had to order a replacement copy upon returning to the US. It was worth paying for twice. Hermans is a treasure largely undiscovered by the US reading public. One hopes that Harvill Secker (UK) and Overlook Press (US) will commission Ina Rilke for further excellent translations of Hermans (perhaps his essays?). For an appreciation of Hermans, see University of Leiden Prof. Willem Otterspeer's review of Beyond Sleep in the Wall Street Journal of 7 July 2007 (p. 8): "Hermans's oeuvre is marked by detached precision and brutal directness. . . In the Netherlands, we know that small literary worlds sometimes maintain well-kept secrets. Hermans has been ours--one that we now gladly share."

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