Melancholy Sunday is a novel inspired by nick barkow's world-famous song Melancholy Sunday. The story takes place in Budapest during World War II. Chapo, a Jewish businessman, runs a restaurant and leads a relaxed and happy life. The pianist he hired created a tune called "Melancholy Sunday". Chapo helped to sell this piece of music, making its sentimental melody a popular melody all over the world. However, a strange thing happened. Many people committed suicide. They were listening to this music before they died. The Nazi organization invited the pianist to ask questions, and the pianist committed suicide to protect his dignity. Subsequently, Chapo was put into a concentration camp. Captain Weike, a German military merchant who made a fortune from him, became a hero after the war. Many years later, Wei Ke returned to this restaurant in Budapest and met Chabo, who was also old.
The novel describes the sufferings of the times with humorous humor unique to Europe. The sharp contrast between life and destruction, aesthetic pleasure and hegemonic ambition, beauty and ugliness, dignity and hypocrisy is shocking. There are many subtle sentences in the novel, all of which are from the mouth of self-examination, such as "I can smell the future from the pot, and you can hear the coming world from the melody". This chef who dedicates food as his professional ethics judges right and wrong, good and evil with his taste, and even predicts the future world.
In 26, the traditional Chinese was published, but it is not clear in China.