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Vilmos Kondor (born 1954) is the name (possibly pseudonym) of a successful Hungarian author. He's been dubbed as "the creator of Hungarian crime fiction". [1]
His seven crime novels, known as the "Sinful Budapest" or "Budapest Noir" Cycle, depict the adventures of a journalist, Zsigmond Gordon, and are set in Budapest from the 1930s to the 1950s. They have become very popular in Hungary. The first novel in the cycle, Budapest Noir, was adapted as a film directed by Éva Gárdos which premiered 2 November 2017.
Kondor has written a trilogy of historical thrillers about the fictional Wertheimer family's almost century-long affiliation with the Holy Crown of Hungary; a trilogy of contemporary police procedurals with political overtones featuring Detective Tibor Ferenczy; and a short novel, Az otthontalanság otthona (The home of homelessness), the income from which he donated to a charity that supported the migrants who arrived in Hungary during the crisis in 2015.
In 2022 he published the first of a series of mystery novels set in an alternate reality version of 20th century history, in which following the end of World War II Hungary does not become a communist Eastern Bloc nation, but rather develops into an independent and successful Switzerland-like capitalist country. Some of the same characters who appear in his "Sinful Budapest" cycle also appear or are referenced in the new counterfactual/speculative fiction series.
In April of 2023, the first novel in this series, Második magyar köztársaság (The Second Hungarian Republic) won the Péter Zsoldos Audience Choice Prize, an annual Hungarian literary award given to works in the imaginative fiction genre (science fiction, fantasy, supernatural horror, etc.) genre.
His novels and short stories have been turned into audiobooks, radio plays, a graphic novel, photo exhibitions, and an interactive smartphone app, Budapest walking tour and interactive mystery game.
Kondor attended university in Szeged, then continued his studies in Paris. He graduated in chemical engineering from the Sorbonne, then returned to Hungary. Currently he teaches mathematics and physics at a high school. He lives with his wife, daughters and dog in a small village near Sopron.
Kondor worked for three years on his first published novel, Budapest Noir. It was his fourth finished manuscript. Kondor finished the Budapest Noir series with the fifth novel, Budapest novemberben (Budapest in November), published in June 2012.
The core five novels of the Budapest Noir cycle are set in Budapest during the years 1936-1956 and all feature Zsigmond Gordon, a determined crime reporter. As prequels to the series two additional novels have been published, plus a collection of short stories. These prequels chronicle Gordon's history in both Philadelphia and Budapest prior to 1936.
The novels have proven to be very successful in Hungary.
To date, only Budapest Noir, the first novel in the series has been published in English, but new English translations of the five core novels are in progress. Budapest Noir has been published in German, Italian, French, Polish, Dutch, Russian, Estonian, Bulgarian, Greek, Czech, and Slovenian translations, and all five core novels of the Budapest Noir cycle were translated into Finnish and published by Tammi.
Budapest Noir
The first novel in the series was published in February 2008 by Agave Könyvek.
A Jewish girl is found dead in Budapest in 1936, and Zsigmond Gordon sets out to solve a murder that everyone else in his soon-to-be Fascist country wants to leave buried.
Budapest Noir received a warm reception in Hungary, and many reviewers hailed it as the first true hardboiled crime story written in Hungarian. One critic, Péter I. Rácz, welcomed Kondor as the author of the first Hungarian crime thriller. [2]
"The search [for a Hungarian crime thriller] is at an end: Vilmos Kondor’s novel is a Hungarian crime thriller and then some, one of the harder variety, in the spirit of Chandler and Hammett, but with Hungarian characters and set in the Hungarian capital in the period before World War II. ... Kondor’s literary experiment has been a great success: the Hungarian hard-boiled crime thriller has been born, and, far predating its own period, it leads its readers – with an effect that 'carries into the present' – to the literary realm of the 1930s." ÉS.
Bűnös Budapest (Budapest Sin)
The sequel to Budapest Noir was published in June 2009 by Agave Könyvek.
The story is set in the fall of 1939, a couple of weeks after the outbreak of World War II, and features Zsigmond Gordon and Sándor Nemes, a retired detective. They start investigating two different cases: Gordon wants to find out why a former colleague and friend has died, while Nemes is hired to find out what happened to a huge quantity of cocaine and morphine that has gone missing. The two cases merge, and the solution involves politicians, Hungarian Nazis and corrupt policemen. One reviewer, Péter Urfi, wrote about the "Kondor phenomenon": [3]
“In the Hungarian book market, developments as joyful as the Kondor phenomenon are rare. Kondor is a professional genre author: he knows exactly what a hard-boiled crime novel should be like, and how to write one. His protagonist, the resigned crime reporter Zsigmond Gordon, and his chosen time and place, Budapest in the 1930s, are both complex and mysterious enough for a series to be built around them, with the same characters and the same readers, for whom the slightly more lengthy Budapest Sin will not be a disappointment.” Magyar Narancs
A budapesti kém (Budapest Spy)
The third novel in the series was published in 2010 by Agave Könyvek.
Hungary is about to get drawn into World War II when Zsigmond Gordon is asked to do something important for his country, and sets out to catch a deadly spy in war-torn Europe, only to find the traitor in Budapest in 1943.
A critic called the novel a "time machine". [4]
"All those who have never daydreamed about travelling back in time with a time machine to change the course of certain events, raise your hand. If any of you wish to relive Hungary as it was in the 1940s, then by all means pick up Vilmos Kondor’s latest novel, which not only reveals practical espionage facts, but also depicts the operation and circumstances reigning within the secret services of a country being driven into war."
Budapest romokban (Budapest in Ruins)
The fourth novel in the series was published in 2011 by Agave Könyvek.
After the horrors of World War II, Hungary is about to become a democracy, but in the summer of 1946 an assassin strikes in the middle of Budapest, and the consequences are more dire than anyone would dare to think. Gordon starts to investigate the real culprits, who turn out to be not the criminal lords of the capital, but ruthless Soviet officers and their even more ruthless masters.
A reviewer emphasized that Kondor writes about a kind of freedom that has not been common in Hungary: [5]
“Without Vilmos Kondor’s work the acts of the man socialized for freedom (with all it consequences) couldn’t be studied in Hungarian texts.”
Budapest novemberben (Budapest in Revolt)
The fifth novel in the series was published in 2012 by Agave Könyvek.
October 1956 finds Gordon in exile in Vienna, where he is asked to identify a dead body as his adopted daughter. Even though the girl turns out to be someone else, Gordon – along with Krisztina – hops on the last train to Budapest, where a revolution has just started, tanks are rolling onto the streets, and people are dying by the hundreds. But Gordon is interested only in finding his daughter, and the dangerous killer who tries to stay hidden while chaos ensues on the streets of a city that is fighting for its independence and freedom.
A reviewer welcomed the way Kondor handles history in this final novel in the Budapest Noir series: [6]
"Kondor doesn't only paint a picture and doesn't only repeat what is in the history books: he tries to interpret it, make sense of it, and help us understand the relations and dynamics of this hectic era."
Szélhámos Budapest (The Big Budapest Con)
Published in 2016 by Libri Könyvkiadó.
This novel is the prequel to Budapest Noir, which sheds light on Gordon Zsigmond's youth, the years following the stock market crash, and the journalist's first case in Pest.
The young Zsigmond Gordon has recently returned home from Philadelphia, where he fled from personal life crises and the storms of history. Gordon is working as a journalist for Az Est, until one scorchingly hot day, in Tabán, an actor and stockbroker named Szatmári is found dead, and clues lead to a notorious American fraudster.
A haldokló részvényes (The Dying Shareholder)
Published in 2018 by Libri Könyvkiadó.
A collection of new and previously published short stories featuring Budapest and Zsigmond Gordon. As a correspondent for Az Est, Gordon follows up on mysterious and complicated cases, as well as not so mysterious ones, involving murderous servants, swindlers, safe-drillers, and femme fatales.
A budapesti gengszter (The Gangster from Budapest)
Published in 2019 by Libri Könyvkiadó.
In the spring of 1929 Zsigmond Gordon is in the United States, working as journalist for the Philadelphia Inquirer. He receives an unexpected assignment: to write an article about the liquor smuggling that has engulfed the city and the corruption that feeds on it, but the article will only be worth something if he gathers material for it from the inside. While gathering material under cover, he soon stumbles upon a wider crime conspiracy, and quickly maneuvers himself into a situation where, if he doesn’t play his hand carefully, he will never live to write another article.
A másik szárnysegéd (The Other Aide-de-Camp)
Published in 2013 Agave Könyvek
In the life of Lieutenant Miklós Wertheimer, who serves as aide-de-camp to Admiral Horthy, the Regent of Hungary, three things are important: his uniform, his honor, and his car. But in October 1944 all three are in danger at the same time, as the regent's son is kidnapped from under his nose, Hungary withdraws from the war (if only for a few hours), and the threat of an Arrow Cross Fascist coup becomes a chilling reality. Disaster is inevitable, so the regent and his inner circle entrust Lieutenant Wertheimer with two tasks: get a geologist out of the country before the Arrow Cross Fascist catch him, and get the Holy Crown of Hungary safely out of the country as well.
A koronaőr második tévedése (The Crown Guard’s Second Mistake)
Published in 2014 by Agave Könyvek
At the end of April 1919, people in Budapest had given up even the semblance of a normal life. Chaos has reigned in the city thanks to the activities of the council government, there is hardly anything to eat, and only the future is more uncertain than the past. However, this whole upheaval does not particularly affect the demobilized First Lieutenant Miklós Wertheimer, who, recovering from the Spanish flu, hears worrying news about the protecting the Holy Crown of Hungary, the traditional role of the generation the Wertheimer family.
A korona ügynöke (Agent of the Crown)
Published in 2018 by Libri Könyvkiadó
In 1876, Miklós Gyra is a not very successful lawyer living in Pest. His office is above a smelly fish market and his main client is accused of insulting the Austro-Hungarian emperor. He shares his not very comfortable apartment with his wife and young son, but his calm bourgeois life unexpectedly disrupted by a diary that arrives in the mail that reveals a complicated story revolving around the mysterious disappearance of the ancient Holy Crown of Saint Stephen during Hungary’s War of Independence in 1848-49 and its equally mysterious reappearance in 1867—just in time for the coronation of the Austrian emperor Franz Josef as King of Hungary.
A bűntől keletre (East of Sin)
Published in 2017 by Libri Könyvkiadó
Budapest, 2015. The Prime Minister's birthday party ends with a death in a bowl of minestrone soup. National panic breaks out, the press speculates, and the police are helpless. Detective Ferenczy is drafted for the team created to investigate the death and catch the perpetrator. But determining whether a terrorist organization, the machinations of the political opposition, or something else is behind the death depends solely on a detective struggling with his own mid-life crisis.
Értetek teszem (I do it for you)
Co-written by Zsófi Kemény and Vilmos Kondor Published in 2018 by Libri Könyvkiadó
Budapest is plunged into chaos. The air is dominated by drones, the streets by armed men and a handful of police trying to stop them. In this confusion, Capt. Tibor Ferenczy tracks down the killer, who at first he thinks is a simple madman, but it soon becomes clear that he is taking his victims based on a precise and conscious plan. He can only count on his companion, the university student Réka Lengyel. The manhunt takes place in revolutionary nests, politicians' hideouts and dark corner pubs, while disaster tourists in party buses roam the streets of Budapest.
Örvényben (In a Vortex)
Published in 2021 by Libri Könyvkiadó
1989 was memorable for the newly-graduated detective Tibor Ferenczy: not only did the Kádár system collapse, but he found himself in the middle of a love triangle. As his country stumbles out from under the shadow of socialism, Ferenczy, his best friend, and the love of his life, race towards fateful change, and murder investigation brings to light secrets Ferenczy would prefer to forget.
This new series of mystery novels shares some aspects with the speculative fiction genre and is set in an alternate reality version of 20th century history in which Hungary negotiates a separate peace at the end of World War II and does not fall under Soviet control. Some actual historical figures appear in these novels, but often play far different roles in Kondor's post-1945 version of reality than the did in actuality. In both novels, a Paternoster lift (aka the "elevator of death") plays a role.
Második magyar köztársasá (The Second Hungarian Republic)
Published in 2022 by Open Books
The first of a series of contrafactual or “alternate reality mysteries” opens on June 26, 1966, when the Beatles are preparing for their first concert in Hungary at the National Stadium and one of their sound technicians is found stabbed behind the soundstage. No trace of the murder weapon was found and there were no witnesses. The head of the Budapest Police Department, János Kádár, is impatient for results and assigns the case to the young and talented detective Albert Nemes, who is joined by an eccentric Scottish colleague, but the solution to the mystery must be sought in dark secrets from World War II.
Az első budapesti olimpia (The First Budapest Olympics)
Published in 2023 by Open Books
After Mexico City withdraws from hosting the 1968 Olympics, the games are staged in Budapest. The American-born Gold medal contender of the Hungarian swimming team, Ike "Johnny" Wilkerson, dives into the Olympic pool only to sink dead to its bottom a few seconds later. In whose interest could it be to kill the world-class swimmer? The fact that a Transylvanian terrorist group takes responsibility for the crime hints at a political motive, but the poisons found in the diver's body lead investigators Albert Nemes and his new colleague to suspect otherwise. The pair are under pressure for answers from both American diplomats and their bickering Hungarian superiors eager to avert an international scandal.
Kondor always uses a third-person narrative that is arguably a masked first-person narrative, since the reader always sees what the protagonist(s) see. The narrator is also an historical figure who knows only the time frame of the novel and never steps out of it. Kondor thus views events through the eyes of his protagonists, and rarely comments on the political situation. He follows in the steps of Charles Willeford in the sense that his characters never "think", they only "act": there are no inner monologues.
Kondor often mixes his fictional characters with persons from real life, including Leó Vécsey (journalist), Kornél Tábori (journalist), Tibor Ferenczy (police commissioner), Péter Hain (detective), Tibor Wayand (detective), István Bárczy (chief of staff), and Vilmos Tarján (journalist). He thoroughly researches both the actual figures and historical events that appear in his novels in order to invoke the atmosphere of Hungary, and especially Budapest, in the past.
Antal Kocsis was a Hungarian boxer who competed in the 1928 Summer Olympics. In 1928 he won the gold medal in the flyweight class after winning the final against Armand Apell of France. He was born in Budapest-Kispest and died in Titusville, United States. His character plays a small but memorable role in Vilmos Kondor's 2012 novel Budapest Noir.
The Government of National Unity was a Nazi-backed puppet government of Hungary, which ruled the German-occupied Kingdom of Hungary during the Second World War in eastern Europe. After the joint coup d’état with which the Nazis and the Arrow Cross Party overthrew the government of the Regent of Hungary, Miklós Horthy, the Arrow Cross Party established the coalition Government of National Unity on 16 October 1944.
Budapest Noir is the first Hungarian noir written by Vilmos Kondor and published by HarperCollins in Hungary in February 2012. The novel is about a crime journalist Zsigmond Gordon, who wants to find the killer of a Jewish girl found dead in Budapest in 1936, and besides the criminal element offers social commentary, political and historical background of Hungary flirting with fascism.
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