A hugely significant and wonderfully haunting collection of Joseph Roth's journalism from the 1920s and '30s. Superbly translated by Michael Hofmann -- William Boyd
This wonderful selection of journalism from the Weimar years, a period Roth spent in Paris, Germany and on the road, displays his genius from every angle, as a rebel, a loyalist and a man of compassion. It has been translated by Michael Hofmann, whose ear seems so faultless that you feel in reading his work that you have not been reading a translation at all -- Jan Morris * Daily Telegraph ***** *
Thanks to the expert translations of Michael Hofmann, Roth is on track to canonical status... The writing is so consistently incisive that we devour the lot, compulsively, from cover to cover. Roth's philosophical eye universalises minor incidents with aphorisms worthy of Marcus Aurelius -- Amanda Hopkinson * Independent *
There are so many fantastic scenes, indelible characters and exquisite lines to marvel at... Dazzling, elegiac, mordant and harrowingly oracular -- George Prochnik * New York International Times *
This collection of [Roth's] journalism creates a vivid sense of a continent on the brink of change -- Lucy Popescu * Independent on Sunday *
As good as any book in the series [of Hofmann's translations] and, at certain unheralded moments, better -- James Buchan * The Oldie *
Atmospheric... dark and funny * National Geographic Traveller *
[Roth's] style is quick, dashed with colour and rendered vivid in English by Michael Hofmann... In an explicit labour of love, the distinguished translator draws his favourite bits of Rothania into a multi-hued frescos of a raucous time and place... A new classic -- Stoddard Martin * Jewish Chronicle *
Dazzling... An exquisite time capsule -- Robert Bound * Monocle *
Poet Michael Hofmann most brilliantly conveys the fury that makes Roth special * Irish Times *
Each of the [collection] is an evocative vignette of a bygone era... The Hotel Years is an instant classic -- Lucy Scholes, Paperback of the Week * Observer *
Wonderful... displays [Roth's] genius from every angle * Daily Telegraph *
Of ineffable worth [these stories] offer us beautifully drawn portraits of the lost world of Mitel-Europa, complete with long train journeys, animated boulevard cafes, grand hotels and a seemingly stylish life lived out of two suitcases in the 1920s and 1930s... [Roth's] stories are bathed with alarming foreknowledge of the new emerging forms of power, yet have no political axe to grind. They are elegiac, dazzling and prescient -- Barnaby Rogerson * Country Life *
It seems perhaps a little trite to parrot Roth's assertion that his journalism has given us a portrait of an age - but it is only trite because it is true. With The Hotel Years, Roth has done far more than just give us the portrait of just his age, however, he has also given us a portrait of our own. Reading The Hotel Years is like staring into a mirror - the same anxieties, the same hatreds, the same longings, the same forces at play... Strikingly, Roth's pieces frequently display a Kafka-like suspension of the rules of our world -- Josh Romm * Forward *