Hungarian author (1929–2016)
Imre Kertész (9 November 1929 - 31 March 2016) is a Hungarian Jewish author, Holocaust concentration camp survivor, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2002.
From: Wikiquote (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Native Name:
Kertész Imre
Alternative Names:
Imre Kertesz
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Kertész, Imre
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Kertesz, Imre
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I. Kertész
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I. Kertesz
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Imre Kertes
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Kertes, Imre
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I. Kertes
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Imne K'erŭt'esŭ
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K'erŭt'esŭ, Imne
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Imra Kirtīs
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Imrje Kjertijes
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Imure Kerutēsu
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I. K.
From Wikidata (CC0)
"You mustn’t forget about your future, Enrique." "I’m living for the present, Dad." "Ah!" he waved that aside. "The present is just temporary."
‘ I boiled up. "I know," I burst out. ‘It only has to be accepted temporarily — temporarily, but every day afresh. And every day ever more. Temporarily. Until we have lived to the end of our temporary lives, and one fine day we temporarily die.
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That evening he talked about Leonardo and Michelangelo. It is impossible to place them in the human world, he said. It is impossible to comprehend how anything that attests to greatness has survived; it is obviously a result of innumerable chance events and of human incomprehension, he said. If people had understood the greatness of those works, they would have destroyed them long ago. Fortunately, people have lost their flair for greatness and only their flair for murder has persisted, though undoubtedly they have refined the latter, their flair for murder, to an art, almost to point of greatness, he said.