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River (Paperback)
Esther Kinsky; Translated by Iain Galbraith
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R393
R316
Discovery Miles 3 160
Save R77 (20%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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â€After many years I had excised myself from the life I had led in
town, just as one might cut a figure out of a landscape or group
photo. Abashed by the harm I had wreaked on the picture left
behind, and unsure where the cut-out might end up next, I lived a
provisional existence. I did so in a place where I knew none of my
neighbours, where the street names, views, smells and faces were
all unfamiliar to me, in a cheaply appointed flat where I would be
able to lay my life aside for a while.’ In River, a woman moves
to a London suburb for reasons that are unclear. She takes long,
solitary walks by the River Lea, observing and describing her
surroundings and the unusual characters she encounters. Over the
course of these wanderings she amasses a collection of found
objects and photographs and is drawn into reminiscences of the
different rivers which haunted the various stages of her life, from
the Rhine, where she grew up, to the Saint Lawrence, the Hooghly,
and the banks of the Oder. Written in language that is as precise
as it is limpid, River is a remarkable novel, full of poignant
images and poetic observations, an ode to nature, edgelands, and
the transience of all things human.
Komotau, the Czech Republic, late summer, 1945. Four
women-seventy-year-old Johanna, her two daughters Hanna and Maria,
and Hanna's daughter Anna-are ordered by the new Czech authorities
to leave their homes and assemble with other Germans at the local
train station. They are given thirty minutes-the "wild expulsions"
of Sudeten Germans have begun. But where is Anna? Witnessing the
revenge lynching of SS and suspected collaborators on her walk
home, she arrives in Komotau to find her family gone. The trek
takes the older women via Munich, then Dresden and Magdeburg, to an
outpost in the far northwest of the Soviet zone where they settle
as farm laborers. Once united again, their hope of one day
returning to the heimat-homeland-is both a source of strength and a
burden, choking attachments to new surroundings and neighbors. This
conflict will prove to be the story of their lives, as well as both
the joy and ruin of Anna's son. A tale of four generations told in
Reinhard Jirgl's unique and subversively expressive idiom, The
Unfinished plays out between the ruins of Nazi Germany and the rise
and fall of communist East Germany, the birth of the Berlin
Republic, and the shadow of a new millennium.
A powerful performance text that illuminates incidents of
anti-immigrant violence in contemporary Germany. Between 1998 and
2007 a series of killings in Germany, disdainfully styled "doner
murders" by the media, were attributed by German police to
internecine rivalries among immigrants. The victims included eight
citizens of Turkish origin, a Greek citizen, and a German
policewoman. Not until 2011 did the German public learn not only
that the police had ignored signs pointing to the real
perpetrators, a neo-Nazi group called the National Socialist
Underground, but also that important files, possibly containing
evidence implicating state agencies, had disappeared from the
archives of Federal Police and intelligence organizations. Esther
Dischereit, one of the preeminent German-Jewish voices of the
post-Holocaust generation, takes that failure of the state to
protect its citizens from racist violence as the core of her
performance text Flowers for Otello: On the Crimes That Came Out of
Jena. Seeking an appropriate language with which to meet the
bereaved, she also finds a way to raise the blanket of silence that
is used by those who would prefer that we forget. Combining witness
testimony, myth, and incidents from a history of violence against
minorities, Flowers for Otello, in Iain Galbraith's translation,
refuses chaos, instead revealing the chilling, patterned order of
tragedy while bringing a great writer's humanism to the fore.
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The Unfinished
Reinhard Jirgl, Iain Galbraith
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R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A profound novel detailing the brutal legacy of Nazism on four
generations of a family in Germany. Komotau, the Czech Republic,
late summer, 1945. Four women—seventy-year-old Johanna, her two
daughters Hanna and Maria, and Hanna’s daughter Anna—are
ordered by the new Czech authorities to leave their homes and
assemble with other Germans at the local train station. They are
given thirty minutes—the “wild expulsions” of Sudeten Germans
have begun. But where is Anna? Â Witnessing the revenge
lynching of SS and suspected collaborators on her walk home, she
arrives in Komotau to find her family gone. The trek takes the
older women via Munich, then Dresden and Magdeburg, to an outpost
in the far northwest of the Soviet zone where they settle as farm
laborers. Once united again, their hope of one day returning to the
heimat—homeland—is both a source of strength and a burden,
choking attachments to new surroundings and neighbors. This
conflict will prove to be the story of their lives, as well as both
the joy and ruin of Anna’s son.  A tale of four
generations told in Reinhard Jirgl’s unique and subversively
expressive idiom, The Unfinished plays out between the ruins of
Nazi Germany and the rise and fall of communist East Germany, the
birth of the Berlin Republic, and the shadow of a new millennium.
Â
Max Weber famously described politics as “a strong, slow drilling
through hard boards with both passion and judgment.” Taking this
as his inspiration, Alexander Kluge brings readers yet another
literary masterpiece. Drilling through Hard Boards is a
kaleidoscopic meditation on the tools available to those who
struggle for power. Weber’s metaphorical drill certainly embodies
intelligent tenacity as a precondition for political change. But
what is a hammer in the business of politics, Kluge wonders, and
what is a subtle touch? Eventually, we learn that all questions of
politics lead to a single one: what is political in the first
place? In the book, Kluge masterfully unspools more than one
hundred vignettes, through which it becomes clear that the
political is more often than not personal. Politics are everywhere
in our everyday lives, so along with the stories of major political
figures, we also find here the small, mostly unknown ones: Elfriede
Eilers alongside Pericles, Chilean miners next to Napoleon, a
three-month-old baby beside Alexander the Great. Drilling through
Hard Boards is not just Kluge’s newest fiction, it is a
masterpiece of political thought.
Whether in poetry, fiction, radio drama or sound installations,
Esther Dischereit's work represents a unique departure in recent
European writing: a distinctive, off-beat syntax of German-Jewish
intimacy with the fractured consciousness and deeply rutted
cultural landscape of today's Germany. Sometimes a Single Leaf,
mirroring the development of Esther Dischereit's poetry across
three decades, includes selections from three of her books as well
as a sampling of more recent, uncollected poems. It is her first
book of poetry in English translation. "From these splinters,
flowers bloom: where the dead lie, trees grow and we must walk
among them. In these poems, Esther Dischereit, whose mother was one
of the few who survived the Holocaust in hiding within Nazi
Germany, lays the present over the past with piercing effect."
Preti Taneja, author of Wir, die wir jung sind
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River (Paperback)
Esther Kinsky; Translated by Iain Galbraith
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R447
R382
Discovery Miles 3 820
Save R65 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Ulrike Draesner is recognised as one of Germany's most important
living poets, as well as being an original and daring writer of
fiction. Her poetic language, recorded where breath and script
meet, can unsettle conventional reading modalities: its orthography
refuses to capitalize; its punctuation— if the stops and starts
may be called that — is rarely executed by comma or period; its
sequentialities, shunning the comfort of bespoke narrative,
undermining the reliability of marching lines and subaltern
clauses, are born at the intersection of worldly impulse and bodily
pulse, vulnerable to the loops of memory. Her writing favours an
exchange with the reader that explores unfamiliar modes of
encountering the world to form the sociable space of a poem. Her
work is charged with a delicious, inquisitive restlessness.
Visually acute, her poems are keen to discover, reflect on and body
forth complex blendings of thought, sound, smell and image,
delivering a revealing diffraction to the reader's ear.
In this masterful first book of original poems, Iain Galbraith
explores how people's actions and experiences shape not only their
own lives but the world around them. His poems are full of sharp
observations and a level of detail which ground the reader in
whichever world he presents, and while the settings vary from the
mundane to the epic the language never fails to retain a sense of
the fantastical. Through his words Galbraith is able to to take us
on an emotional journey through love, grief, hope and discontent.
After years of experience writing and translating poetry, The True
Height of the Ear acts as evidence of Galbraith's comfort in
writing in a variety of different styles, creating a book of poems
which consistently entice his readers.
"A splendid addition to an already extraordinary oeuvre."--Teju
Cole, "The New Yorker"
German-born W. G. Sebald is best known as the innovative author of
"Austerlitz, "the prose classic of World War II culpability and
conscience that put its author in the company of Nabokov, Calvino,
and Borges. Now comes the first major collection of this literary
master's poems. Skillfully translated by Iain Galbraith, they range
from pieces Sebald wrote as a student in the sixties to those
completed right before his untimely death in 2001. In nearly one
hundred poems--the majority published in English for the first
time--Sebald explores his trademark themes, from nature and
history, to wandering and wondering, to oblivion and memory.
Soaring and searing, the poetry of W. G. Sebald is an indelible
addition to his superb body of work, and this collection is bound
to become a classic in its own right.
"How fortunate we are to have this writer's startling imagination
freshly on display once again, expressed in language honed to a
perfect simplicity."--Billy Collins
"A watershed volume . . . nothing less than
transcendent."--"BookPage"
" Sebald was] a defining writer of his era."--"The New Republic"
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Selected Poems (Paperback)
Alfred Kolleritsch; Translated by Iain Galbraith
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R431
Discovery Miles 4 310
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Alfred Kolleritsch was born in Brunnsee, Austria in 1931, and now
lives in Graz. He concluded his studies of Philosophy and German
with a dissertation on Martin Heidegger. He is perhaps best-known
as the president of the "Forum Stadtpark" in Graz, a role he has
fulfilled since 1968, and as the co-founder and editor of the
literary magazine, "manuskripte," a pioneering journal. His own
work, which consists of prose and poetry, has won several awards,
including the Horst Bienek Prize for Poetry (2005). This is the
first selection of his work in English and brings before the
English-speaking public one of the major figures in contemporary
Austrian writing.
In this masterful first book of original poems, Iain Galbraith
explores how people's actions and experiences shape not only their
own lives but the world around them. His poems are full of sharp
observations and a level of detail which ground the reader in
whichever world he presents, and while the settings vary from the
mundane to the epic the language never fails to retain a sense of
the fantastical. Through his words Galbraith is able to to take us
on an emotional journey through love, grief, hope and discontent.
After years of experience writing and translating poetry, The True
Height of the Ear acts as evidence of Galbraith's comfort in
writing in a variety of different styles, creating a book of poems
which consistently entice his readers.
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