
Junkermann
Junkermann's Swan Song
M. Karagatsis(Author)
Aiora Press
Published on 1. March 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
400 pages
978-618-241-017-2 (ISBN)
Description
Junkermann's Swan Song returns to Vasily Karlovich Junkermann at the end of his life. The swaggering adventurer of the first volume-Cossack guard, refugee, social climber, and self-styled conqueror of interwar Athens-now confronts the reckoning of age, disillusionment, and decline. Where Junkermann traced a frenetic rise shaped by appetite, ambition, and desire, this second volume turns inward, offering a darker, more introspective meditation on memory, loss, and mortality. Older and increasingly isolated, Junkermann looks back on a life that now appears at once grand and grotesque, a farce animated by illusions of success, love, and masculine honour that have long since curdled into bitterness and emptiness. As past passions and betrayals resurface, the novel assumes a distinctly Faustian cast, probing the psychic costs of a life spent in pursuit of power and pleasure. Tragic, surreal, and often darkly comic, Junkermann's Swan Song weaves together psychological depth and Freudian undertones with Karagatsis's sharp social insight and mordant humour. In its unflinching portrait of a man undone by the very myth that once sustained him, the novel becomes a haunting reflection on the chimera of success and the devastation that follows when its promise proves hollow.
Reviews / Votes
"Like The Great Gatsby and Tender is the Night, Junkermann should be read as one of the emblematic novels of the interbellum period, not just on a Greek, but on a global scale. - Gunnar De Boel Journal of Modern Greek Studies May 2009 Junkermann is a thoroughly engrossing read... As a Greek offshoot of the western tradition of the novel, it deserves closer examination, celebration and, quite possibly a Hollywood movie, all of its own." -- Dean Kalimniou NEOS KOSMOSMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Greece
Product notice
With flaps
Dimensions
Height: 205 mm
Width: 142 mm
Thickness: 33 mm
Weight
432 gr
ISBN-13
978-618-241-017-2 (9786182410172)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
M. Karagatsis (the pen name of Dimitris Rodopoulos) was born in Athens in 1908 and studied law in Grenoble and Athens. He is considered one of the finest Greek prose writers of the twentieth century and a central figure in the Generation of the 30s, a group of writers, poets, artists, and scholars that introduced fresh modernist currents to Greek literature and art. He was a prolific writer, with over ten published novels, as well as many novellas and plays. Besides the bold sensuality of his writing, he is known for his focus on the complexities and dark, instinctive underside of human psychology. He died in Athens in 1960. Patricia Felisa Barbeito is Professor of American Literatures at the Rhode Island School of Design. She is a translator of Greek fiction and poetry, and has published and lectured extensively on Modern Greek literature. Her translation of Elias Magliniss The Interrogation (Birmingham Modern Greek Translations, 2013) was awarded the 2013 Modern Greek Studies Associations Constantinides Memorial Translation Prize. Panagiotis Stavropoulos (b. 1962) is a painter and iconographer. He studied painting and engraving at the Gerrit Rietvelt Academy in Amsterdam, and has painted icons and frescoes in churches around Greece. From 1996 to 2014 he lived on the island of Tinos, where he focused mainly on sculpture. His work has been presented in solo exhibitions in Athens and Tinos. Panagiotis has also participated in several group exhibitions, and his artwork features on numerous covers of the Modern Greek Classics series of Aiora Press.