The Last Temptation
By (Author) Nikos Kazantzakis
Translated by P. A. Bien
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
1st July 2005
10th November 1995
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
889.332
Paperback
608
Width 111mm, Height 178mm, Spine 36mm
334g
Kazantzakis' classic novel, blacklisted by the Vatican, filmed by Scorsese, has been labelled heretical, blasphemous and also a masterpiece. His Christ is an epic conception, wholly original.'This magnificent novel.brings to its spiritual theme the vivid details of a Breughel painting.' Sunday Telegraph
Nikos Kazantzakis was born in 1883 in Herakleion on the island of Crete. During the Cretan revolt of 1897 his family was sent to the island of Naxos, where he attended the French School of the Holy Cross. From 1902 to 1906 he studied law at Athens University. He worked first as a journalist and throughout a long career wrote several plays, travel journals and translations. His remarkable travels began in 1907 and there were few countries in Europe or Asia that he didn't visit. He studied Buddhism in Vienna and later belonged to a group of radical intellectuals in Berlin, where he began his great epic The Odyssey, which he completed in 1938. He didn't start writing novels until he was almost 60 and completed his most famous work, Zorba the Greek, in 1946. Other novels include Freedom and Death (1953) and The Last Temptation (1954), which the Vatican placed on the Index. Return to Greco, an autobiographical novel, was published in 1961.