About this item
Highlights
- It is 1968, the Cold War is raging, and the United States is bogged down fighting the "Communists" in Vietnam.
- About the Author: Viliam Klimáček, writer, director, founder of the GUnaGU theater, is one of Slovakia's most prolific writers and playwrights.
- 303 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Historical
Description
Book Synopsis
It is 1968, the Cold War is raging, and the United States is bogged down fighting the "Communists" in Vietnam. The Berlin Wall is the symbol of a world cut in half, a punitive wall, isolating the Soviet republics that then formed the USSR. In the spring of 1968, the Czechoslovakian Communist Party experimented with "socialism with a human face"--known then as the "Prague Spring." Suddenly there was freedom of the Press; an end to arbitrary wiretaps; and citizens regained the right to travel without prior authorizations and visas. The borders opened to the West, consumer goods appeared in the stores---and the winds of freedom blew over the country. That summer, Alexander and Anna boarded their Skoda Felicia, a brand-new convertible, to join their daughter Petra in Bratislava, where she had just completed her brilliant medical studies. Tereza, the daughter of a railway worker who survived the concentration camps and a Pravda editor who had long taken in Hungarian refugees from 1956, stayed in a kibbutz in Israel to reconnect with her Jewish culture. Józef, a pastor defrocked for refusing to denounce parishioners to the Party, delivered his first uncensored sermons on the radio. Then, suddenly, on the nights of August 20-21, Soviet tanks invaded Prague to put an end to this brief liberalization experiment. For a few hours, the border with Austria would remain open. Vienna was an hour's train away. Everyone now must make a choice: leave or stay? Fleeing violence or resisting the oppressor? Faced with the invasion of our country by an overmatched foreign power, what would we do? Viliam Klimacek's historical novel looks back at these major events in Czechoslovakian history. Celebrating the identity of a people, its folklore, its beauty, and its vitality, he makes this novel personal and real by focusing on the story of ten people enmeshed in this difficult moment in history. By telling the human stories of the Czech diaspora, Klimacek reveals the impact of these rapidly moving events on his characters and the lives of their families (based on real people whose names have been changed). Through Tereza, Petra, Józef, Sena (Alexander), Anna and Erika, he tells us about the lives of these (extra)ordinary people--their lives in Czechoslovakia, Their decisions to leave, their flight, their families torn apart and separated, the abandonment of all that they possessed for unknown elsewhere, their perilous journeys, their arrival in a new country, their reception and integration in a new country. The novel describes the vicissitudes and hopes of newcomers, mainly in Canada, the United States, Austria, England, and Israel, who face obstacles--learning a new language, encountering red tape with registration, validating their diplomas and finding a job and housing. They quickly realize--depending on their own situation that many will never see or visit the families they left behind in Czechoslovakia. The experiences that Klimacek's characters face, endure and overcome we all know will be repeated for untold millions again and again as people around the world flee intolerance, war, calamities in weather and other disaster in our contemporary age. Constructing his stories on very real testimonies, Klimacek's novel is simultaneously a hymn to tolerance, to acceptance of others, and to the need to support and help the weakest or the poorest. It leads us all to ask ourselves questions, to reflect and perhaps, with a little goodwill, to see certain things differently. While the story is at time dark, it is also full of hope. You may know someone in your own community whose experiences are mirrored in this novel and through your reading you may now appreciate their unbending spirit and desire for freedom and well being for themselves and their families.Review Quotes
"In 1968, the communist country of Czechoslovakia had a brief fling with freedom. Termed the "Prague Spring," the experiment in "socialism with a human face" allowed citizens freedom of the press and travel, as well as an end to arbitrary wiretapping. It all came crashing down when Soviet tanks bulldozed over its borders on August 20-21 and occupied the country. Before the Soviets clamped shut the border with Austria, many individuals and families had a terrible decision to make: flee or face the oppressor?
Translated into English for the first time, The Hot Summer of 1968 follows the stories of ten people confronted with the unthinkable. Klimáček introduces a cast of characters that are based on real people and their experiences .... Klimáček captures the early promises of the Prague Spring and the devastation wrought by the Soviet invasion through these bigger-than-life characters....
The Hot Summer of 1968 is a touching story of families involuntarily separated and the search for home wherever it leads. It provides a pertinent historical lens to the plight of refugees: yesterday, today, and always."
"Klimacek's The Hot Summer of 1968 is a compelling must-read! This faced-paced, engaging novel delves into the repercussions of dramatic, revolutionary times in world history on a series of personable characters.... this novel offers thought-provoking insight for our contemporary times."--Madelaine Hron, author of Translating Pain: Immigrant Suffering in Literature and Culture--Professor Madelaine Hron
"This historical novel is both heartbreaking and hopeful as it shares the stories of families displaced by the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia....It is tactful and humorous about bringing to life the calamitous experiences of the Slovakian people during the fall of communism." Foreword Reviews Magazine--Aimee Jodoin "Foreword Reviews Magazine"
"This is a loving portrait of Slovak families whose hopes are first raised by the Prague Spring and then dashed by the Soviet invasion in summer 1968. Viliam Klimáček captures the anger and humiliation, the bravery and betrayal - not to mention the distinctive styles and aromas - of late-60s Czechoslovakia. It is also a tale of exile, about painful decisions to stay or leave, and the awkward adjustments that greeted new arrivals to Canada, the United States and Israel." --James Thomson, The Slovak Spectator--James Thomson, Journalist "Newspaper"
About the Author
Viliam Klimáček, writer, director, founder of the GUnaGU theater, is one of Slovakia's most prolific writers and playwrights. He graduated from the Medical School in Bratislava and worked at the cardiac clinic. He has written more than forty plays, for which he has won seven Alfred Radok Awards. He has also written experimental fairy tales, poems, radio plays, and opera librettos.and currently works for television and film. He won the IBBY International Award for his book Foot to Foot. His novel Namestie kosmonautov won theNovel 2006 competition, was nominated for the Anasoft litera award and won this award for 2007.