Laughable Loves
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Laughable Loves is a collection of stories that first appeared in
print in Prague before 1968, but was then banned. The seven stories
are all concerned with love, or rather with the complex erotic
games and stratagems employed by women and especially men as they
try to come to terms with needs and impulses that can start a
terrifying train of events. Sexual attraction is shown as a game
that often turns sour, an experience that brings with it painful
insights and releases uncertainty, panic, vanity and a constant
need for reassurance. Thus a young couple on holiday start a game
of pretence that threatens to destroy their relationship, two
middle-aged men go in search of girls they don't really want, a
young man renews contact with an older woman who feels humiliated
by her ageing body, an elderly doctor uses his beautiful wife to
increase his attraction and minister to his sexual vanity. In
Laughable Loves, Milan Kundera shows himself, once again, as a
master of fiction's most graceful illusions and surprises. Milan
Kundera was born in Brno and has lived in France for over forty
years. He is the author of the internationally acclaimed and
bestselling novels The Joke (1967), Life is Elsewhere (1973), The
Farewell Waltz (1976), The Book of Laughter and Forgetting (1978),
The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1984), Immortality (1991), and
the short-story collection Laughable Loves (1969), which were all
originally written in Czech. His play, Jacques and His Master
(1984), Slowness (1995), Identity (1998) and Ignorance (2002) were
all originally written in French. Milan Kundera has also written
extensively about the novel in four collections of essays - The Art
of the Novel (1968), Testaments Betrayed (1993), The Curtain (2007)
and Encounter (2009).