Book Movie Suggestions for Prague, Vienna and Budapest
I will use guidebooks to plan trip itself to Prague, Vienna and Budapest but wonder if anyone has suggestions for good books (history, memoir, travel, novels, etc.) that would give me background before the trip. I've almost finished Danubia: A Personal History of the Habsburg Empire by Simon Winder and The Accidental Empress: Sisi #1 by Allison Pataki. Enjoyed Czech movie, Zelary. History and art are my main interests. Thanks!
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When we were in Vienna this summer our guide talked about the movie "The Third Man" and I think there's even a theater in the city that shows it. It's apparently set in Vienna. Haven't seen it myself, though. Stars Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Trevor Howard (1949).
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If you are interested in history as much as contemporary works you might look for:
"A Time of Gifts" by Patrick Leigh Fermor, for Vienna and Prague "Between the Woods and the Water" ditto, for Budapest |
The Good Soldier Svejk and his adventures in the Great War by Jaroslav Hasek ,illustrations by Josef Lada , great insight in to the humour of the Czech people and their love of dogs.
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Any WWII film made within the last 20 years will almost certainly have been shot (at least in part) in Budapest, as a double for Berlin. So that's an (admittedly indirect!) way of getting a feel for the city!
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The Unbearable Lightness of Being, or anything else by Milan Kundera.
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Kudos to you for almost finishing Danubiana! I couldn't do it. :)
Perhaps, "The Woman in Gold" movie for Vienna? "The Pornographer of Vienna" to read if you are into Egon Schiele; and "The Radetzky March" for the decline of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. "The Hare with Amber Eyes" is good, too. "Waiting for Sunrise," though, left me "waiting" for the storyline to develop. |
Danubia would be a much better book if a good editor had condensed it by about 200 pages. But I've learned a lot from it. Thanks for your suggestions; I've checked out The Woman in Gold from my library for this weekend.
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For Prague, I would strongly suggest Prague Winter by Madeleine Albright.
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Check out Norman Davies' books. Claudio Magris' Danube. Watch reruns of those televised New Year's Day Concerts presented by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra with intermission performances, usually dance, showing the attractions of Vienna. |
I just finished reading Enemies of the People by Kati Marton. Its a story about her young life and that of her parents in Communist Budapest. Highly recommend it.
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Just finished "hearing" the Audible book The Lost Wife by Alyson Richman. The story is primarily a story of star-crossed lovers separated by WWII set initially in Prague...with much of the plot taking place in Terezin, the "showcase" concentration camp where the heroine works creating art for the Nazi's. It's a bit of a "chick" book with passages of rapturous love but my husband enjoyed it as well, and there is a big emphasis on the artworks that were created to expose what was happening in the camps.
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I haven't read these yet, but I've also picked up a collection of short stories by Czech authors, Prague: A Traveler's Literary Companion edited by Paul Wilson, Black Lamb & Grey Falcon by Rebecca West, dealing with the old Yugoslavia, and non-fiction, Eastern Europe: Everything You need to Know About the History (and more) of a Region that Shaped our World and Still Does by Tomek Jankowski.
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This is worth watching
and this forgotten Alfred Hitchcock movie is silly beyond words, but quite a curio |
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Originally Posted by fourfortravel
(Post 16654416)
. "Waiting for Sunrise," though, left me "waiting" for the storyline to develop.
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Thanks -- this did give a lot of insight into Czech 20th century history.
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I'm making progress on all these suggestions and have found other titles also. The movie Woman in Gold and Madeline Albright's memoir, Prague Winter, both excellent. I listened to both of the "Sisi" novels by Alison Pataki. Enjoyed the graphic memoir by Peter Sis, a Caldecott award winning illustrator, titled The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain.
Also enjoyed Embers, a literary novel by the Hungarian author Sandor Marai, and The Glass Room, a historical novel by Simon Mawer set in the 1930s Czechoslovakia (house based on the Villa Tugendhat, now a UNESCO heritage site. |
I'm glad you liked Prague Winter. I should read some of these other suggestions too.
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You might be interested in reading The Lost Wife by Alyson Richman. This novel is set in war time Prague and Terezin concentration camp. (I would also recommend a tour of this Nazi “show” camp.)
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1997 Academy Award winner for Best Foreign Language Film: Kolya, which takes place in Soviet-occupied Prague. Wonderful movie; available on Netflix and probably your local library.
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Originally Posted by kitbag
(Post 16715072)
Do you mean the movie "Before Sunrise", with Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke, which is entirely set in modern Vienna?
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This book for Budapest.
The first 20 minutes of Mission Impossible (the first movie) are in Prague - from Kampa Island to Old Town Square (the restaurant where Ethan Hunt meets Kittridge is fake). Anything about Raoul Wallenberg (or Adolf Eichmann) will discuss Budapest. Anything about the Golem of Prague, The Prague Spring, or the Velvet Revolution will discuss Prague. |
Am I too late for this party?
I'm probably too late to assist the person who originally posted this, but I thought I'd add a little something for those who come later.
If you like being in locations where films were shot, check out Amadeus for Prague, noting these places: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086879...?ref_=tt_dt_dt The Third Man was set and filmed in post-war Vienna. Fortunately, that era in Vienna's history is long-gone. However, it has become enough of a cult film that there is actually a museum devoted exclusive to it. THIRD MAN MUSEUM :: Visit |
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