Budapest at the turn of the century: a city of grand boulevards and hidden fissures, where café conversations echo with secrets, and the Danube carries the weight of unspoken dreams.
In this philosophical novel set amid the twilight splendor of the fin de siècle, three remarkable minds wander through salons, galleries, cemeteries, and shadowed streets. Ratio, the mathematician, seeks perfect order and crystalline truths. Anima, the psychiatrist, listens for the fragile pulses of longing beneath reason's surface. Dr.iur. Etouhnav, the jurist, stands between them, parsing the delicate balance between precedent and uncertainty.
Together they probe timeless questions:
-Do we ever truly live new days, or only intricate variations of forgotten patterns?
-Is beauty an objective grace, or a fleeting verdict of the soul?
-Does death mark a mere biological cessation, or the point where all our frameworks fall silent?
A richly atmospheric journey through Budapest's cafés, avenues, and echoing underground, this novel is a profound exploration of memory, desire, and the fragile architectures by which we seek to make sense of life's elusive truths.
For readers who treasure Proust's delicate introspection, Musil's searching intelligence, or the haunting chiaroscuro of turn-of-the-century Europe, this is a work to linger over-an invitation to walk the long boulevards of thought, where every question is both a promise and a gentle undoing.