The Illiterate
Author: Ágota Kristóf
Translator: Nina Bogin
Publisher: New Directions (2023)
In 2004, late in her legendary career, Ágota Kristóf wrote this slim dagger of a memoir about being a refugee and living and writing in a foreign tongue. Narrated in a series of stark, brief vignettes, The Illiterate is Ágota Kristóf’s memoir of her childhood, her escape from Hungary in 1956 with her husband and small child, her early years working in factories in Switzerland, and the writing of her first novel, The Notebook. Few writers can convey so much in so little space. Fierce yet almost pointedly flat and documentarian in tone, Kristóf portrays with a disturbing level of detail and directness an implacable message of loss: first, she is forced to learn Russian as a child (with the Soviet takeover of Hungary, Russian became obligatory at school); next, at age twenty-one, she finds herself required to learn French to survive.