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The Good Soldier Svejk and His Fortunes in the World War (Penguin Modern Classics)
 
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The Good Soldier Svejk and His Fortunes in the World War (Penguin Modern Classics) (Paperback)

by Jaroslav Hasek (Author), Josef Lada (Illustrator), Cecil Parrott (Translator)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 784 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd; New edition edition (27 Jul 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0141184280
  • ISBN-13: 978-0141184289
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.6 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 288,779 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

Hasek's most important work was centered around the deeply funny story of a hapless Czech soldier in the Austro-Hungarian army -- dismissed for incompetence only to be pressed into service by the Russians in World War I (where he is captured by his own troops). A mischief-maker, bohemian and drunk, Hasek demonstrated his wit in this classic novel of the Czech character and preposterous nature of war.


About the Author

Jaroslav HaA ek (1883-1923) Besides this book, the writer wrote more than 2,000 short works, short stories, glosses, sketches, mostly under various pen-names.

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The funniest book ever?, 11 Oct 2002
By MR GERRET LORENZEN (South Ockendon, Essex United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
If I were born again, I would happily be Svejk.
On the face of it, this simpleton dog seller from Prague has nothing going for him. Even the dogs he sells are mongrels, made up to look like pedigrees (with fake certification, naturally).
As the story progresses, you find he is not only intelligent, but uses dumb ignorance to get his way. From almost starting a riot in Wenceslas Square, to being lost by his officer in a card game, to being captured by his own troops, the scrapes Hasek creates for his hero will make you laugh out loud.
Don't be scared if you think the setting is outdated, the footnotes are excellent in explaining the context. I guarantee you will recognise many of the characters in people you have met.
One word of warning though. Hasek died while writing this masterpiece. Literally in mid paragraph. Its frustrating, but makes you wonder, what if....
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The brutality of war is brought home in this hilarious tale., 26 Jul 2000
By A Customer
Svejk, a man who sells dogs for a living in Prague after being discharged from the army for stupidity is an instantly likeable character. His escapades throughout the war however depict a man able to very cleverly use his reputation for idiocy to avoid the frontline. Along the way he meets numerous characters which the author uses well to display his disdain for religion, royalty, the army, politicians and authority in general. This is a tale of the ordinary man and his ordinary acquaintances who happen to be unwilling participants in an horrific event in world history. The book is very long indeed and there is a section in the middle where nothing seems to happen and can be hard work. The book however pulls itself together as Svejk and his companions are herded towards the frontline and where Svejk's crowning glory is to be captured by his own army. Overall Svejk is the star and while his comical and often ludicrous stories frequently amount to nothing, they do give a feel for the lives of the average Czech at the time.

This book is well worth a go, you may give up on it as some people I know have but if your a fan of stories depicting the small man doing his best to resist against the big machine then you'll enjoy Svejk.

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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Humour in the time of war, 27 Aug 2001
Humour in the time of war Jaroslav Hasek's 752-page (Penguin) unfinished work, The Good Soldier Svejk and his Fortunes in the World War is the one book which, to my mind, is the most hilarious of the century.

Much of the book is autobiographical, and a must-read companion to it is Hasek's autobiography. The background is World War I, which started with the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, nephew of the Austrian Emperor, Franz Joseph, at Sarajevo in Bosnia by a Serbian nationalist in 1914. Hasek's saga starts with this very incident, in the discussion of which at a bar Svejk makes statements like, "A shocking loss. You can't replace Ferdinand by any twopenny-halfpenny idiot. Only he ought to have been still fatter... Then of course he'd have had a stroke long ago, when he was chasing those old women at Konopiste when they were collecting firewood and picking mushrooms on his estate, and he wouldn't have had to die such a shameful death." For several other statements like these Svejk was hauled straight from the bar to a prison. The bar-tender was also taken in as he had said, "the flies shitted on His Imperial Majesty" (his photograph, really). Of such irreverence for authority is the book made up.

But Svejk doesn't remain long in prison, as he is found to be "a patent imbecile and idiot according to all the natural laws invented by the luminaries of psychiatry." So he is sent to a lunatic asylum where he declares to his interlocutors, "I was officially certified my military doctors as a patent idiot," and is promptly thrown out.

Svejk, who was carrying on an innocent business of painting up stray dogs and selling them off as pedigreed specimen, soon found himself drafted into the army. He goes for the draft in style, pushed in a wheelchair by his char woman as he is stricken with rheumatism. Svejk is very keen on going to the war as he says, "Except for my legs, I'm completely sound cannon-fodder."

Sorry, I'm going to refrain from quoting any more, for the entire book is quotable. The uniqueness of Svejk is that he debunks authority by the very act of accepting it. And, in a Catch-22esque way, he proves himself to be no fool merely by proclaiming himself to be one. While he is generally an amiable sort of person, when he sets his mind to it he can be ruthless, like in getting rid of his captain's creditor, dealing with a greedy batman or reducing a particularly disliked officer to speechlessness.

Some of the memorable characters in the book are Otto Katz, the drunk chaplain, who gambles away Svejk, his batman; the volunteer Marek, who is writing the regiment history in advance; the ever suffering Lieutenant Lukas who has a love-hate relationship with his batman, Svejk; and the sapper Vodicka, who considers Hungarians as "a pack of lousy bastards," who only deserve to be given a sock. The fights we have witnessed during recent times between Serbs, Bosnians, Czecs and Hungarians are echoes of the conflicts evinced in this early 20th Century novel when they were all part of the mighty Austro-Hungarian Empire.

The situations in the book are each funnier than the other. Like when Svejk loses his regiment and hopes to rejoin it by marching forward at all times, which the author calls an anabasis. In the process he takes a totally circuitous route, with many adventures on the way. Or the time when Svejk drinks up an entire bottle of illegal whisky at one go to prove to a spying officer that it was water, thus saving his lieutenant some embarrassment. Or when Svejk bungles up the delivery of a billet douce from Lt. Lukas to his ladylove, and lands up in jail. Then there are the innumerable asides - tales told by Svejk, Marek and others about their doings outside the war.

We owe much to Parrott for giving us this vibrant translation of Hasek's work. In his introduction, Parrott recognises the contribution of Max Brod (who had diagnosed the genius of the other Czechoslovakian literary giant, Franz Kafka) for putting Hasek in the forefront of 20th Century literature. Parrott quotes Brod as saying, "Hasek was a humorist of the highest calibre. A later age will perhaps put him on a level with Cervantes and Rabelais."

Almost 400 years after the picaresque writings of Rabelais (France) and Cervantes (Spain), comes this novel in a similar genre from the beleaguered Czech nation. Erich Maria Remarque's stark novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, is a serious indictment, not just of World War I but of all subsequent wars of this century. The Good Soldier Svejk, with all its humorous readability, decries the meaninglessness and wastefulness of war just as much.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The Good Soldier and his Parrott
This is an excellent translation of this classic story. The hardback Everyman's Library edition is beautifully produced. It is unabridged. Read more
Published 2 days ago by C. A. O'Toole

5.0 out of 5 stars Chose between Schweik and Svejk.
One of my top three favourite books [with' Catch 22' and' Ulysses'], The Good Soldier Schweik is a treat every time. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Alan Kemp

5.0 out of 5 stars Timeless, humorous, wonderful
As someone who often has trouble with books not written in the last 30 years, I was a little daunted at the idea of reading a book written at the time of the First World War. Read more
Published on 6 Jan 2004 by Dan Sumption

5.0 out of 5 stars maybe the best novel of the 20th century
Svejk is not the sort of novel that would appeal to James Joyce, Virginia Woolf or Henry James fans. Read more
Published on 21 Oct 2003 by leventis3

5.0 out of 5 stars still as good as i remembered it
i'll not rehash the plot of the book again, as others have done it better and at greater length below. just one small observation tho'... Read more
Published on 31 Jul 2003 by madra

5.0 out of 5 stars Beats Catch 22, any day
For years I thought Catch 22 was the ultimate anti war novel. I even saw a lecture by Joseph Heller before he died. Read more
Published on 21 Mar 2003 by MR GERRET LORENZEN

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good Soldier...
In these troubled and belligerent times of ours, the world could do with a great novel to make us laugh at the folly of war, and at the same time question the nature of... Read more
Published on 23 Jan 2003 by L. Howard

4.0 out of 5 stars Hasek is a master of parody and farce
THis is a piece of WW1 fiction with a differnce. It like the rest is portarying the nastiness of war. Read more
Published on 7 Oct 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book!
A fantastic book (if a little heavy-going in places). The level of sarcasm in this book is one of the things that makes it so funny. Read more
Published on 18 Sep 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Schweik: A triumph of humanity over barbarity
Hasek's character Scweik carefully and purposefully goes about being himself in crazy slip-shod glory as the weight of the absurdity of conscription and imperial ambitions of an... Read more
Published on 20 Nov 1999

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