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Review: The Queen's necklace

Scandal made glorious

February 4, 2010 12:09
Antal Szerb: a writer of greatly imaginative fiction rediscovered

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

By Antal Szerb
Pushkin Press £12

Pushkin Press’s translations (by Len Rix) of the work of the Jewish Hungarian writer, Antal Szerb, must be one of the most exciting literary discoveries of recent years.

Szerb’s novels, Journey by Moonlight and Oliver VII (both Pushkin Press, £7.99) came first, to great acclaim. “Szerb belongs with the master novelists of the 20th century,” said the Daily Telegraph. “Szerb is a master novelist”, wrote the Guardian. Now comes The Queen’s Necklace, a history of a 1780s scandal involving Marie Antoinette. It is the greatest yet, an astonishing work.

Just as we cannot read The Queen’s Necklace without thinking of what was to become of Marie Antoinette in the Revolution, so it is impossible to read Szerb’s work without the shadow of his fate. In 1944, he was deported to a Nazi prison camp and executed during a forced march near the end of the war.