A pékné by Dezső Szomory

(5 User reviews)   772
Szomory, Dezső, 1869-1944 Szomory, Dezső, 1869-1944
Hungarian
Okay, so picture this: it's Budapest, 1918. The world is ending in the Great War, and in a little bakery, a woman's world is ending too. This isn't a grand war epic; it's a tiny, heartbreaking story about a baker's wife named Mrs. Bíró. Her husband is gone, her son is off fighting somewhere, and she's just trying to keep the ovens hot and the bread coming. The 'conflict' here is quiet but huge. It's the daily battle against loneliness, against the crushing silence of an empty house, and the slow, painful realization that the life she knew might be gone forever. Szomory doesn't give us battlefields; he gives us a flour-dusted kitchen counter and the weight of waiting. It's about how history isn't just made in palaces and trenches—it's felt in the ache of a single person, alone with their thoughts and the smell of fresh bread. If you want a story that shows the human cost of war without a single gunshot, this is it. It's sad, it's beautiful, and it sticks with you.
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Dezső Szomory's A pékné (The Baker's Wife) is a quiet, powerful snapshot of a life put on hold. Published in 1918, it captures the home-front experience of World War I with an intimacy that feels almost too real.

The Story

The story follows Mrs. Bíró, a middle-aged baker's wife in Budapest. Her husband has been drafted into the army, leaving her to run their small bakery alone. Her son is also away, fighting on the front. Her days are a monotonous cycle of kneading dough, baking bread, serving customers, and cleaning up. The real drama isn't in big events, but in the empty spaces: the silence of the apartment upstairs, the empty chair at the table, the constant, low-grade fear that comes with every knock at the door or piece of news from the front. She interacts with neighbors and customers, but these conversations are full of unspoken worry and shared grief. The story is her internal monologue—her memories, her fears for her family, and her struggle to find meaning in the daily grind when the future is so uncertain.

Why You Should Read It

This book got under my skin. Szomory is a master of mood. He makes you feel the weight of the flour sack, the heat of the oven, and the profound loneliness of a crowded room. Mrs. Bíró isn't a heroic figure in the traditional sense; she's just enduring. And that's what makes her so compelling. Her strength is in her stubborn routine, in keeping the bakery open as an act of defiance against the chaos of the world. Reading it, you get a visceral sense of how war disrupts the most ordinary lives. It's not about glory; it's about survival, about the emotional labor of holding things together when everything is falling apart. The prose is simple but incredibly evocative—you can almost smell the fresh bread.

Final Verdict

This is a book for readers who love character studies and historical fiction that focuses on the personal, not the political. It's perfect for anyone interested in WWI literature beyond the trenches, or for fans of writers who explore the interior lives of everyday people. If you enjoyed the quiet intensity of a novel like Mrs. Dalloway or the focused, small-scale drama of a play like The Glass Menagerie, you'll find a lot to love here. Be warned: it's not a cheerful read, but it's a deeply moving and human one. A short, potent reminder of the resilience found in the most ordinary places.

Liam Walker
1 year ago

Very interesting perspective.

Jackson Young
3 months ago

Having read this twice, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. A true masterpiece.

Matthew Anderson
1 year ago

To be perfectly clear, the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. Absolutely essential reading.

Nancy Lee
1 year ago

Just what I was looking for.

Donna Wright
1 year ago

I had low expectations initially, however it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. A true masterpiece.

5
5 out of 5 (5 User reviews )

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