Auto-da-Fé

Elias Canetti

Pages

464

Year

1935

Difficulty

Challenging

Themes

obsession, isolation, knowledge, madness

A scholar of immense learning is destroyed by his own rigidity, his inability to deal with other people, and a catastrophically ill-judged marriage, Auto-da-Fé is one of the strangest and most powerful novels of the twentieth century.

Why Start Here

Peter Kien is an almost parodic figure of the pure intellectual: he lives only for his vast library, has contempt for everything outside it, and is brought to ruin by his ignorance of ordinary human reality. Canetti’s portrait of him is both savagely comic and deeply unsettling. You laugh, and then you notice how close the caricature is to something real.

The novel is structured in three parts, the world in the head, the headless world, and the world in the head again, and each section shifts perspective and tone in ways that keep you constantly off-balance. This is a book that knows exactly what it is doing, and does it with extraordinary control.

What to Expect

A claustrophobic, often darkly funny novel with an unreliable protagonist who is impossible to like and impossible to look away from. The supporting cast of grotesques, a housekeeper, a chess-obsessed dwarf, a corrupt caretaker, is unforgettable. This is a demanding read, but one of those novels that genuinely changes how you see the world.

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