All This Belongs to Me
Petra Hulova · 2002
About this book
Hulova's striking debut novel tells the story of four generations of Mongolian women, written by a young Czech author who studied in Ulan Bator. It represents the cosmopolitan ambition of contemporary Czech literature and its willingness to look beyond national borders. The novel signals a new generation of Czech writers engaging with globalization while maintaining the psychological depth of the Czech tradition.
Start reading in Czech
Upload any page from All This Belongs to Me and get sentence-by-sentence translations, grammar notes, and vocabulary building — free.
Start reading for freeMore czech books

The Good Soldier Svejk
Jaroslav Hasek · 1923
Hasek's unfinished comic masterpiece about an apparently dim-witted soldier who bumbles through World War I is the most beloved Czech novel ever written. Svejk's cheerful subversion of military authority through feigned stupidity embodies a distinctly Czech strategy of resistance — surviving oppression through humor and passive noncompliance. The novel defined Czech national humor and remains a cultural touchstone quoted in everyday conversation.

The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Milan Kundera · 1984
Kundera's most famous novel interweaves the love stories of two couples with philosophical meditations on fate, freedom, and the weight of history, all set against the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. It introduced the world to the Czech experience of living under occupation while maintaining inner freedom. The novel captures the characteristically Czech blend of erotic frankness, philosophical playfulness, and political awareness.

The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
Milan Kundera · 1979
This novel-in-seven-parts explores how totalitarian regimes manipulate memory and how individuals resist through the private acts of remembering and laughing. Kundera's technique of blending fiction, autobiography, and philosophical essay created a new form of the novel. The book is essential for understanding the Czech preoccupation with memory, forgetting, and the political uses of history.

The Joke
Milan Kundera · 1967
Kundera's first novel tells the story of a man whose life is destroyed by a postcard joke about Trotsky, capturing the terrifying consequences of humor under a humorless regime. Published during the Prague Spring, it became a bestseller before being banned after the Soviet invasion. The novel reveals how deeply Czech culture understands the dangerous power of irony and the fragility of personal autonomy.
