The Return of Kral Majales

The Return of Kral Majales: Prague’s International Literary Renaissance, 1990-2010, An Anthology.
Charles University, Prague
938 pages
With bios of contributors

Prague, the cosmopolitan centre of Europe, has for two decades been at the heart of a multicultural, linguistic experiment without recent parallel. This anthology offers a panoramic view of the various ‘scenes’ that have defined its literary renaissance—from the widely heralded ‘left bank of the nineties’ to its post-millenial aftermath.

In 1965, U.S. poet Allen Ginsberg twice visited Prague, Czech Republic, where he discovered he and his poetry had attracted a significant following. Staying at the Ambassador Hotel on Wenceslas Square, Ginsberg met with Czech poets and translators, all of them under constant surveillance by the StB (Czech security police). His second stay coincided with annual May (Majales) Festival. As Ginsberg participated in the public May Day parade and festivities, a large number of assembled university students spontaneously elected him king (“kral”) of the festival: Kral Majales. He made a speech dedicating the glory of his crown to Franz Kafka. Within a week, Ginsberg was arrested by the police, held in isolation, and then deported. He was put on a plane headed for London Heathrow Airport.

Twenty-five years later, in 1990, a year after the Velvet Revolution toppled the Czech communist regime, Ginsberg returned to Prague. What he found was a very different place. The subsequent decade saw the city undergo radical and vibrant changes as the people unleashed decades of pent up creative energies. These dramatic changes appeared in all aspects of the culture—architecture, music, theater, film, visual arts, and literature. Thus the title of this remarkable anthology: The Return of Kral Majales.

Included in the collection is a piece by Christopher Cook entitled “The Cyclops,” an excerpt from a novel-in-progress.

Details at Amazon (currently unavailable)

—Christopher

The Best Travel Writing 2006

“The virtues of travel have long been touted, and we are all familiar with the cliches. Travel broadens the mind, dissolves dogma, rattles the cage, brings new vigor to the step. It is hilarious, romantic, life-threatening, enlightening, toxic to weak relationships, invigorating to the strong. Travel is tedious and soporific, exhilarating and addictive. It is expensive because evanescent, cheap because the traveler is forever rewarded with memory and story. You wish you were home, you wish you never had to go home. All these things are true, and if you are lucky you may experience each of them on the same trip.”
   —Publisher’s Preface

 

For anyone planning to travel abroad or live in a foreign locale, or anyone simply interested in the greater world we live in, The Best Travel Writing 2006—True Stories From Around the World provides more than 25 of the best travel pieces from established and emerging authors. The entertaining and sometimes gripping stories in this collection cover every corner of the globe, from Tibet to Morocco, from Thailand to Mexico to Switzerland and points between.

This anthology, which includes a memoir essay from Christopher Cook in the Czech Republic, is the latest installment in a consistently entertaining series highlighting the adventuresome side of travel.

“Travelers’ Tales has thrived by seizing on our perpetual fascination for armchair traveling.”
     —The Washington Post

View details at Amazon

—Christopher

Best American Mystery Stories 2003

Audiobook

This anthology of 20 stories includes selections from Elmore Leonard, Joyce Carol Oates, Walter Mosley, George P. Pelecanos, Pete Dexter, Scott Phillips, and of course… a story from Christopher Cook.

The anthology also appears in an abridged form as an audiobook. Christopher’s story was one of the seven stories chosen for the audiobook.

“Edgar Award winner and bestselling novelist Michael Connelly has chosen a collection of stellar stories by the genre’s luminaries and by the most promising newer talents in the field. As usual, this year’s Best American Mystery Stories will delight readers with dramatic variety and unsurpassed quality.”
       —From the Publisher

“The stories are generally well written and a few are gems… and there isn’t really a bad writer in it… Elmore Leonard makes an appearance with “When the Women Come Out to Dance” (it’s got a nice twist but you expect that with Leonard). My hands down favorite is “The Pickpocket” by Christopher Cook, a tale that looks at the loss of honor and the pleasure of a well-honed skill. Tone and content blend beautifully in this Paris based tale.”
       —A Reader Review

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—Christopher