Dossier K. is Imre Kertesz's response to the hasty biographies and profiles that followed his 2002 Nobel Prize for Literaturean attempt to set the record straight. The result is an extraordinary self-portrait, in which Kertesz interrogates himself about the course of his own remarkable life, moving from memories of his childhood in Budapest, his imprisonment in Nazi death camps and the forged record that saved his life, his experiences as a censored journalist in postwar Hungary under successive totalitarian communist regimes, and his eventual turn to fiction, culminating in the novelssuch as Fatelessness, Fiasco, and Kaddish for an Unborn Childthat have established him as one of the most powerful, unsentimental, and imaginatively daring writers of our time..