Joseph Roth is the least-known, yet easily the most accessible of the great twentieth-century writers.  His deceptively light, massively concentrated fables of modern history evoke a world of catastrophic change, of disastrous belief and extreme loss.  As the century ends, his stature is increasingly appreciated.  And British readers, in particular, will find in his stories of a great empire's fall deep echoes of their own experience.
Granta Books' major program of republication of Roth's work continues with his last untranslated novel, 'Rebellion' - the story of a Great War veteran, Andreas Pum, who lost a leg and gained a medal.  He marries, plays a barrel-organ, and is happy.  But when he is imprisoned after a fight, life seems unbearably altered.  Then a chance encounter with an old comrade who has made his fortune brings Pum to a world where he has a transfiguring experience of justice . . .