Quote by: Ismail Kadare

I couldn't get to sleep. The book lay nearby. A thin object on the divan. So strange. Between two cardboard covers were noises, doors, howls, horses, people. All side by side, pressed tightly against one another. Boiled down to little black marks. Hair, eyes, voices, nails, legs, knocks on doors, walls, blood, beards, the sound of horseshoes, shouts. All docile, blindly obedient to the little black marks. The letters run in mad haste, now here, now there. The a's, f's, y's, k's all run. They gather together to create a horse or a hailstorm. They run again. Now they create a dagger, a night, a murder. Then streets, slamming doors, silence. Running and running. Never stopping.


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Author Bio


  • NameIsmail Kadare
  • DescriptionAlbanian writer
  • BornJanuary 28, 1936
  • CountryAlbania
  • ProfessionWriter; Poet; Novelist
  • WorksThe General Of The Dead Army; The Castle; Chronicle In Stone; Broken April; The Three-Arched Bridge; The File On H.; The Pyramid
  • AwardsPrix Mondial Cino Del Duca; Prince Of Asturia Literary Prize