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The Café with No Name

Robert Seethaler Katy Derbyshire

$32.99

Paperback

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English
Canongate
01 March 2025
THE NUMBER ONE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER

'How I loved this book . . . Seethaler is in his very own league' Elizabeth Strout

It is 1966, and Robert Simon has just fulfilled his dream by taking over a caf on the corner of a bustling Vienna market. He recruits a barmaid, Mila, and soon the customers flock in. Factory workers, market traders, elderly ladies, a wrestler, a painter, an unemployed seamstress in search of a job, each bring their stories and their plans for the future. As Robert listens and Mila refills their glasses, romances bloom, friendships are made and fortunes change. And change is coming to the city around them, to the little caf, and to Robert's dream.

A story of the hopes, kindnesses and everyday heroism of one community, The Caf with No Name has charmed millions of European readers. It is an unforgettable novel about how we carry each other through good and bad times, and how even the most ordinary life is, in its own way, quite extraordinary.
By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Canongate
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   Export/Airside - Export/Airside/Ireland
Dimensions:   Height: 220mm,  Width: 141mm,  Spine: 17mm
Weight:   234g
ISBN:   9781837260164
ISBN 10:   1837260168
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Robert Seethaler was born in Vienna in 1966 and is the author of several novels including A Whole Life, which was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize, and The Tobacconist, which was a number one German bestseller. Originally published in 2023, Seethaler's novel The Caf with No Name was an instant number one bestseller, spending 44 weeks on the bestseller list. His works have been translated into over 40 languages. Katy Derbyshire is a Berlin-based translator. She has translated works by Christa Wolf, Inka Parei and Clemens Meyer, most notably Meyer's novel Bricks and Mortar, which won the Straelener Prize for Translation. Meyer and Derbyshire have twice been longlisted for the International Booker Prize.

Reviews for The Café with No Name

'How I loved this book! Filled with truth after truth, poignantly rendered and given to us with tender open-handedness. Seethaler is in his very own league, capturing a place and time that is ultimately universal' ELIZABETH STROUT 'Rewarding . . . written with an understated and elegant restraint that is no less poignant and powerful for it' TAN TWAN ENG 'Robert Seethaler has always created the epic from the ordinary . . . In The Caf with No Name, he makes poetry out of the broken lives of the lost and disregarded who inhabit the margins of the great city and shows us how gold can be found in dust' ANURADHA ROY, author of ALL THE LIVES WE NEVER LIVED 'Infused with bright, beautiful glimmers of human connection, The Caf with No Name is a novel as cosy and welcoming as the meeting place established by its protagonist . . . Readers will turn the last page feeling an indelible part of the community Seethaler so lovingly and joyously brings to life' SHANNON BOWRING, author of THE ROAD TO DALTON 'A masterful novel about work and love, connection and despair, how we carry one another, how we transcend the days and the indignities, and how no life is mundane . . . On page after page, Robert Seethaler's The Caf with No Name strikes with the force of life' NICK ARVIN, author of MAD BOY '200 pages of pure reading pleasure' FLORIAN BALKE, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 'Magnificent! Highly and unequivocally recommended' FLORENCE NOIVILLE, Le Monde 'There is so much at stake in this novel, almost everything' Frankfurter Rundschau 'Seethaler is a god of ordinary people's feelings. His characters and settings come alive without a single wasted word and with no undue heaviness at all; his style is straightforward and pure' Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 'Seethaler moves from life's dramas to the love of others and engages his readers to the point where they will feel as if they too are regulars at this Viennese caf' Il Piccolo


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