The Tin Drum
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: N/A
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
A landmark of twentieth-century world literature, The Tin Drum is a darkly comic and surrealist novel set against the backdrop of Nazi Germany and the turbulent years surrounding World War II. The narrative chronicles the life of Oskar Matzerath, a boy who, at the age of three, willfully decides to stop growing and retains the mind of an adult trapped in a child's body, armed with a tin drum and a glass-shattering scream as his weapons against the adult world. Written with savage wit and grotesque imagination, Günter Grass uses Oskar's warped perspective to deliver a blistering moral indictment of German society's complicity in fascism and its collective amnesia in the war's aftermath. The novel unfolds as a confession narrated from a mental institution, blending myth, allegory, and brutal realism into a voice that is simultaneously unreliable, monstrous, and deeply human. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, it stands as an essential and unflinching work of postwar fiction that refuses to let history be sanitized or forgotten.
Author: Günter Grass
Format: Hardback
Published: 1962, Secker & Warburg
Genre: Modern fiction
Condition remarks:
Book: Fair
Jacket: N/A
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
A landmark of twentieth-century world literature, The Tin Drum is a darkly comic and surrealist novel set against the backdrop of Nazi Germany and the turbulent years surrounding World War II. The narrative chronicles the life of Oskar Matzerath, a boy who, at the age of three, willfully decides to stop growing and retains the mind of an adult trapped in a child's body, armed with a tin drum and a glass-shattering scream as his weapons against the adult world. Written with savage wit and grotesque imagination, Günter Grass uses Oskar's warped perspective to deliver a blistering moral indictment of German society's complicity in fascism and its collective amnesia in the war's aftermath. The novel unfolds as a confession narrated from a mental institution, blending myth, allegory, and brutal realism into a voice that is simultaneously unreliable, monstrous, and deeply human. Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, it stands as an essential and unflinching work of postwar fiction that refuses to let history be sanitized or forgotten.