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Produktbild: Flesh

Flesh Winner of the Booker Prize 2025

2

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

6075

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

19.03.2026

Verlag

Vermilion

Seitenzahl

368

Maße (L/B/H)

19,3/12,4/2,6 cm

Gewicht

264 g

Farbe

Altweiß / Schwarz

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-5299-3242-3

Beschreibung

Rezension

Flesh is at once intricate and spacious, it flows both fast and deep. There's brilliance on every page. Szalay is an ingenious conductor of time, and of the fates and forces that give shape to a life Samantha Harvey, author of Orbital

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

6075

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

19.03.2026

Verlag

Vermilion

Seitenzahl

368

Maße (L/B/H)

19,3/12,4/2,6 cm

Gewicht

264 g

Farbe

Altweiß / Schwarz

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-5299-3242-3

EU-Ansprechpartner

Penguin Random House Ireland
Morrison Chambers, 32 Nassau Street
D02 YH68 Dublin
IE
E-Mail-Adresse 2:https://eu-contact.penguin.ie

Herstelleradresse

Penguin Random House LLC
One Embassy Gardens, 8 Viaduct Gardens
SW11 7BW London
UK
penguinpublicity@penguinrandomhouse.com

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

2 Bewertungen

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Interesting style

Bewertung am 12.02.2026

Bewertungsnummer: 3043621

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

I liked the book, it's honest and unpretentious. I appreciated the author's trusts, at least I felt like I was trusted to get it, without unnecessary clutter I could make my mind, freely, about this character, his life, his feelings. It left me thinking about my very own life and choices and I adore a book that stays with me even after I have turned the last page.

Interesting style

Bewertung am 12.02.2026
Bewertungsnummer: 3043621
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

I liked the book, it's honest and unpretentious. I appreciated the author's trusts, at least I felt like I was trusted to get it, without unnecessary clutter I could make my mind, freely, about this character, his life, his feelings. It left me thinking about my very own life and choices and I adore a book that stays with me even after I have turned the last page.

Ja a Study in Restraint and Unease

Benedikt am 25.12.2025

Bewertungsnummer: 2684382

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

David Szalay’s Flesh is a novel defined by reduction: in language, in gesture, and in emotional exposition. The prose is deliberately pared down, almost austere, and it is precisely this restraint that gives the book its distinctive power. Szalay writes in clean, economical sentences, stripping scenes of excess description and leaving much unsaid. As a result, the novel reads quickly, yet never lightly; its apparent simplicity conceals a dense psychological and moral complexity. This reduced style shapes the reading experience in a decisive way. Because Szalay refuses to guide the reader with explicit judgments or emotional signposts, every interaction feels charged with tension. Meaning emerges not from explanation but from implication, from what characters do—or fail to do—rather than what they articulate. The language creates space, and in that space the reader is compelled to reflect, to interpret, and sometimes to feel deeply unsettled. At the center of *Flesh* lies an intentionally **ambivalent protagonist**, one who resists easy categorization. Szalay constructs this character in such a way that identification is constantly interrupted by doubt. At moments, the protagonist appears vulnerable, even sympathetic; at others, distant, opaque, or morally troubling. This oscillation makes it impossible to settle definitively on one side. The reader is drawn into a state of ethical uncertainty, mirroring the character’s own lack of clarity and emotional detachment. In this sense, *Flesh* is less about plot than about perception and judgment. Szalay confronts the reader with the discomfort of withholding verdicts, asking us to sit with contradiction rather than resolve it. The novel’s restrained language and moral ambiguity combine to create a quietly disturbing, intellectually demanding work—one that lingers precisely because it refuses to offer easy answers.

Ja a Study in Restraint and Unease

Benedikt am 25.12.2025
Bewertungsnummer: 2684382
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

David Szalay’s Flesh is a novel defined by reduction: in language, in gesture, and in emotional exposition. The prose is deliberately pared down, almost austere, and it is precisely this restraint that gives the book its distinctive power. Szalay writes in clean, economical sentences, stripping scenes of excess description and leaving much unsaid. As a result, the novel reads quickly, yet never lightly; its apparent simplicity conceals a dense psychological and moral complexity. This reduced style shapes the reading experience in a decisive way. Because Szalay refuses to guide the reader with explicit judgments or emotional signposts, every interaction feels charged with tension. Meaning emerges not from explanation but from implication, from what characters do—or fail to do—rather than what they articulate. The language creates space, and in that space the reader is compelled to reflect, to interpret, and sometimes to feel deeply unsettled. At the center of *Flesh* lies an intentionally **ambivalent protagonist**, one who resists easy categorization. Szalay constructs this character in such a way that identification is constantly interrupted by doubt. At moments, the protagonist appears vulnerable, even sympathetic; at others, distant, opaque, or morally troubling. This oscillation makes it impossible to settle definitively on one side. The reader is drawn into a state of ethical uncertainty, mirroring the character’s own lack of clarity and emotional detachment. In this sense, *Flesh* is less about plot than about perception and judgment. Szalay confronts the reader with the discomfort of withholding verdicts, asking us to sit with contradiction rather than resolve it. The novel’s restrained language and moral ambiguity combine to create a quietly disturbing, intellectually demanding work—one that lingers precisely because it refuses to offer easy answers.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

Flesh

von David Szalay

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