The Street of Crocodiles

Paperback, 160 pages

English language

Published March 1, 1992 by Penguin Classics.

ISBN:
978-0-14-018625-3
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4 stars (2 reviews)

The Street of Crocodiles in the Polish city of Drogobych is a street of memories and dreams where recollections of Bruno Schulz's uncommon boyhood and of the eerie side of his merchant family's life are evoked in a startling blend of the real and the fantastic. Most memorable - and most chilling - is the portrait of the author's father, a maddened shopkeeper who imports rare birds' eggs to hatch in his attic, who believes tailors' dummies should be treated like people, and whose obsessive fear of cockroaches causes him to resemble one. Bruno Schulz, a Polish Jew killed by the Nazis in 1942, is considered by many to have been the leading Polish writer between the two world wars.

Bruno Schulz's untimely death at the hands of a Nazi stands as one of the great losses to modern literature. During his lifetime, his work found little critical regard, but …

5 editions

reviewed The Street of Crocodiles by Bruno Schulz (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics)

Review of 'The Street of Crocodiles' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

On reading these stories through only once, I didn't really get much from them beyond a sense of having been raped by adjectives. It was after a second reading that this book came alive in utterly devastating ways. I have no doubt that I would likely get even more out of subsequent readings.

Schulz is certainly the kind of author who can haunt you in unexpected ways long after you thought you finished reading his work.

Subjects

  • Classic fiction
  • Modern fiction
  • Fiction - General
  • Fiction
  • General
  • Fiction / Classics