Leopold Perutz (November 2, 1882 – August 25, 1957) was a German language novelist and mathematician. He was born in Prague and was thus a citizen of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He lived in Vienna until the Nazi Anschluss in 1938, when he emigrated to Palestine. A world-class mathematician who formulated an algebraic equation which is named after him, he worked as a statistician for an insurance company. During the 1950s he returned occasionally to Austria, where he eventually died. He wrote his first novel, The Third Bullet, in 1915 while recovering from a wound sustained in the First World War. In all Perutz wrote eleven novels, which gained the admiration of Jorge Luis Borges, Italo Calvino, Ian Fleming, Karl Edward Wagner and Graham Greene.
Overview
Perutz' novels are short, elegantly written and are usually
historical novels combining fast-paced, crisply told adventure with a
metaphysical twist.
By Night Under the Stone Bridge is an
episodic work whose separate stories are bound together by the illicit love shared, in their dreams, by a
Jewish woman and the Emperor
Rudolf II. In the
posthumously-published
Leonardo's Judas,
da Vinci's quest for an appropriate face to give the betrayer in his
Last Supper is interwoven with the squabble between a usurer and the merchant to whom he owes money. The title of
Saint Peter's Snow, which is set in what was then the present day (1932), refers to a drug which induces religious fervour; the Nazis, understandably, did not care for it.
The Master of the Day of Judgement is a decidedly different
mystery story about the circumstances surrounding an actor's death in the early twentieth century, and
Little Apple concerns a
First World War soldier's obsessive quest for revenge.
Novels by Perutz in English translation
(Dates of publication are for the original German-language editions)
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Leo Perutz Excerpts - From By night under the stone bridge
The Weird Review: Leo Perutz - Commentary on the weird, criminalist and historical novels and tales of Leo Perutz.
Meta Description: [ Commentary on the weird, criminist, & historical novels & tales of Leo Perutz. ]