The Return of Philip Latinowicz (, pronounced ) is a novel by the Croatian author Miroslav Krleà ¾a. It is considered the first modern complete novel of Croatian literature. The structure is very complex, although it lacks a classical composition and storyline.
Source:
Source:
Twenty-three years before this novel begins, Philip Latinowicz, still a schoolboy living in Kaptol, runs away from home with a hundred florin note stolen from his mother, which he spends on women and booze for three days and three nights. When he returns to his mother's house, she treats him as a stranger and sends him away. Upon his return to Kaptol in the present day, Philip struggles to reconcile his relationship with his mother, whose obsession with perfumes and elite society now threatens to drive him crazy. The two fail to find common ground; when Philip attempts to paint his mother, she is disgusted by his less-than-positive view of her and condemns the project. Even more, he hates her new lover, Dr. Liepach of Kostanjevec, whom he finds pretentious and conceited, despite his obvious charms and kind gestures.
However, it is at one of his mother's elite gatherings that Philip meets BoboÃÂka, to whom he is immediately drawn. They attend the town's St. Roch's Day festival together. The depraved drunkenness and wild nature of the crowd inspire Philip to imagine a painting, depicting the townspeople sinning in the name of their god. On the way home, through the forest, a thunderstorm strikes, and Philip finds himself sharing his imagined painting with BoboÃÂka, and in the process, sharing an intimate moment with her. BoboÃÂka introduces Philip to an entirely different side of Kaptol, made up of BaloÃÂanski, her former and current lovers, and a vibrant nightlife.
But Philip is soon enraged by the presence of BoboÃÂka's new lover, Kyriales, especially when Kyriales questions the utility of art and Philip's talent. Kyriales' erudite critiques baffle Philip, who finds himself almost wanting to believe that painting has become a degenerate practice. Unable to articulate a retort as elegantly as he would have hoped, Philip is forced to reflect inwardly after the conversation, asking himself why he paints and what he gets from his artistic endeavors. He concludes that "art was talent" and that "talent was a force which was inexplicable in terms of anything physical," something "clairvoyant" and supernatural and incomprehensible to someone like Kyriales.
Sometime later, Kyriales jumps in front of a train and is killed. BoboÃÂka is called to identify his mangled body. It is this event that drives BoboÃÂka's decision to leave Kaptol for Hamburg as soon as possible. She arrives at Philip's door that night, asking for the money necessary to get to Hamburg. They arrive at a plan, Philip agreeing to get as much money as he can, and she is insistent on collecting it at seven that same night. The town surveyor can give Philip five thousand, and Philip already has two thousand, making seven thousand for BoboÃÂka.
At 6:22, while waiting for BoboÃÂka, BaloÃÂanski arrives at Philip's door. He laments to Philip that BoboÃÂka is leaving to get away from him, and plans on abandoning him when he has sacrificed everything and dishonored himself all for her. He asks that Philip convince her to stay. At that moment, BoboÃÂka arrives. BaloÃÂanski demands that she leave with him, and she refuses. Finally, she agrees to leave with BaloÃÂanski after telling Philip that she will come back before supper.
Philip is now left alone, angry, and tired. His mother chose this time to come to his room and ask what Mr. BaloÃÂanski had wanted. Philip demands that she leave him alone, but she becomes upset. She warns him about spending too much time with BoboÃÂka, who has a history of ruining men; BaloÃÂanski and Kyriales are examples of that. When Philip insults her for attempting to give him a lecture on morality, she accuses him of not believing in God. Philip then denounces her as a woman who does not even know the father of her own child, a question that tormented him his entire life. She finally confesses to him that his father is none other than Dr. Liepach and storms out of the room.
A knock at the door follows her exit, and Philip finds BaloÃÂanski visiting him yet again. He tells Philip not to expect BoboÃÂka that evening, for she is unable to come. BaloÃÂanski insists that BoboÃÂka had changed her mind and would stay with him in Kaptol. Philip does not believe BaloÃÂanski, who gives him a note which he claims BoboÃÂka wrote to him to explain her decision. But the note is nothing but a receipt for perfume with drops of blood on it. Philip runs to BoboÃÂka's house, only to find her lying on her bed in her own blood, her throat bitten through. Her eyes remained open.
The Return of Philip Latinowicz was originally published in Croatian in 1932 as Povratak Filipa Latinovicza.
The novel has been translated into English, French, German, Dutch, Slovene, Swedish, Slovakian, Macedonian, Czech, Hungarian, Lithuanian, Italian, and Spanish.
The novel was translated by Zora Depolo and published for English audiences in 1959.
In a 2010 poll of 40 Croatian intellectuals for the greatest Croatian novels of all time, compiled by Jutarnji list daily, The Return of Philip Latinowicz came in 3rd, after Ranko MarinkoviÃÂ's Kiklop (Cyclops) and Slobodan Novak's Mirisi, zlato i tamjan (Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh).