Skip to product information
1 of 1

Badenheim 1939- Available September 2026

Badenheim 1939- Available September 2026

by Aharon Appelfeld
Translated by Dalya Bilu

Regular price $16.95 USD
Regular price Sale price $16.95 USD
Sale Coming Soon
Format

Product Details

Verba Mundi

Softcover
ISBN: 978-1-56792-880-8
Pages: 152
Size: 5.5" x 8.5"
Published: September 2026
View full details

A small masterpiece of world literature, set in Austria as the Nazis began their rise.

It is spring 1939. And Badenheim, a resort town vaguely in the orbit of Vienna, is preparing for its summer season. The vacationers arrive as they always have, a sampling of Jewish middle-class life: the impresario Dr. Pappenheim, his musicians, and their conductor; the bubbly Frau Tsauberblit; the historian, Dr. Fussholdt, and his much younger wife; the “readers,” twins with a passion for Rilke; a child prodigy; a commercial traveler; a rabbi.

The list of guests grows longer as the summer goes on. Receiving them in the town are the residents: the pharmacist and his worried wife, the hotelier and his large staff, the pastry shop owner and his irritable baker, Sally and Gertie (two prostitutes), and, mysteriously, the bland inspectors from the “Sanitation Department.”

Finally, the vacationers, whose numbers have now increased by the forced crowding-in of other Jews hardly on vacation, become de facto prisoners in their familiar resort; their “vacation” begins to take on the lineaments of undefined disaster.

Author, and Holocaust survivor, Aharon Appelfeld created a world in Badenheim 1939 that has only gained power for readers since its publication in 1980. Philip Roth called Appelfeld “a displaced writer of displaced fiction who has made of displacement and disorientation a subject uniquely his own.”

Praise for Badenheim 1939

“The sorcery of Badenheim 1939 lies in the success with which the author has concocted a narrative involving rather ordinary characters and made their experienced profoundly symbolic yet never hollow.”—Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, The New York Times

“As real as Kafka’s unnamed Prague . . . imbued with a Watteau-like melancholy.”—Gabriel Annan, New York Review of Books

“Magical . . . gliding from a kind of romantic realism into universal allegory.”—Peter Prescott, Newsweek

“The writing flows seamlessly . . . a small masterpiece.”—Irving Howe, New York Times Book Review

Aharon Appelfeld
Aharon Appelfeld was a novelist who resided in Israel but wrote little about life there. He focused instead on the world that surrounded his childhood—Jewish life in Europe before, during, and after World War II. Much of this work focuses on the search for a mother figure, which perhaps reflects his losing his own mother at a young age. He was also separated from his father during the Holocaust and only found him twenty years later. Appelfield's sparse, metaphorical fiction evokes rather than outright describes these tragic events and the horrors of the Holocaust.

Dalya Bilu is the translator of A.B. Yehoshua, Aharon Appelfeld, and many others. She has been awarded numerous prizes, including the Israel Culture and Education Ministry Prize for Translation, and the Jewish Book Council Award for Hebrew-English Translation.