Showing posts with label German Literature Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label German Literature Month. Show all posts

Monday, November 6, 2017

Best European Fiction, 2018. Including a spotlight on a story by Nora Wagener “You’d have Larvae Too”, translated from German







Works Read So Far for German Literature Month, November, 2017

1.   Vertigo by W. G. Sebald, 1990
2.    The Last Weynfeldt by Martin Suter, 2006
3.    “An Earthquake in Chile” by Heinrich Von Kleist 1809


Best European Fiction, 2018 edited this year by Alex Andriesse, published by Dalkey Archives is the ninth volume in the annual Best European Fiction Series. These books are among the very best ways to keep up with developments in European fiction, discovering new to you writers along the way.  I have been happily following this series since 2013.  During Women in Translation Month (August, 2017) I did posts on several stories by women writers from this wonderful series.  Each author has a detailed biography as do the translators.  

From Dalkey Archives Press

Best European Fiction 2018
Edited by Alex Andriesse
Since its inaugural appearance in 2010, Best European Fiction has become an essential resource for readers, critics, and publishers interested in contemporary European literature. In this, the ninth installment of the series, the anthology continues its commitment to bringing together some of the most exciting prose writing in Europe today. Best European Fiction 2018 is a compendium of stories by both established writers and newcomers, ranging from Ireland to Eastern Europe, ripe for the discovery of curious readers around the world.

Alex Andriesse is a writer, a translator, and an associate editor at Dalkey Archive Press. His writings have appeared in Reading in TranslationProdigalThe Short Story Project, and the Battersea Review. His translation of François-René de Chateaubriand’s Memoirs from Beyond the Grave will be published by New York Review Books in 2017. He lives in Western Massachusetts.  From dalkeyarchive.com

Today’s story, originally published in German, by Nora Wagener, from Luxembourg, “You’d Have Larvae Too” is told in an interesting diary fsshion, as she visits her very soon to die barely conscious father in the hospital.  She hated her father so much that she tells everyone for years, including her fiance, that he was dead.

The story consists of a number of short daily journals, in which she is trying to sort out her feelings and find a way to justify her past preverications to to her fiance. I want to share a bit of the story with you to give you a feel for it.

“Around noon, I got a call from St. Eberhard Hospital, some 300 kilometers away. When I picked up, an inhuman-sounding voice told me my father was dying. There must have been some sort of mistake, I replied. I don’t have a father. Then I hung up. This conversation had become more and more frequent before I finally admitted to being the Loser’s daughter. October 25 Three years ago I’d have just gotten in the car, looked in on him briefly, and then gone on with my day—in and out without a single world. Three years ago I didn’t have this ring on my finger: I’ll always try to be honest with you. Luckily, the topic didn’t ever come up again. And just how am I supposed to break it to Matthias that my parents are still half alive? When we met, I told him they were dead,
both of them, and that my father had been the first to go. You’re crazy, he’ll tell me. Forget having a screw loose—you don’t even have any screws left! You’re a monster! Which shows me just how convenient my being an orphan was, even if he’d never admit to it. Whenever I did something strange, he always had an easy explanation: She lost her parents at such a young age. That’s why she’s like this. But not to worry—he was never short of explanations. If he’d ever met them, he could have said, She’s like that because of her parents.”

I enjoyed entering into the consciousness of the young woman, seeing her trying to overcome her hatred for her father, we learn little about what caused her feelings.

I greatly enjoyed this story.


Nora Wagener was born in Luxembourg in 1989. Educated multilingually, she chose German as her literary language and studied creative writing in Germany. In 2011, her first novel, Menschenliebe und Vogel, schrei, was published in Luxembourg, followed by the collection of novellas E Galaxien, which was published in Germany in 2015. That same year, her play Visions was staged. In 2016, Larven, a collection of short stories was published in Luxembourg, as was d’Glühschwéngchen, a children’s book in her mother tongue, Luxembourgish. She has received several awards (Prix Arts et Lettres, Institut Grand-Ducal) and scholarships (Literarisches Colloquium Berlin) in her home country and abroad. She publishes regularly in anthologies and magazines across Europe.  From Best European Fiction, 2018

I highly recommend anyone interested in a very diverse, with an Irish Heart, take a look at the website of Dalkey Archives Press, based in Dublin. They offer lots of very interesting fairly priced works.


Mel ü

Friday, November 3, 2017

“The Earthquake in Chile” - A Short Story by Heinrich Von Kleist (1809, translated by David Luke and Nigel Reeves


“the kiss and the bite are such close cousins that in the heat of love they are too readily confounded” 
― Heinrich von Kleist





Heinrich Von Kleist (1777 to 1811) was a famous poet, perhaps the leading dramatist of German Romanticism, a novelist but is now, I think, most still read outside of academia, for his short stories.  This will be the third year in which I post on one of his stories during German Literature Month.  (I recommend a collection of his short stories, The Marquise of O and other Stories
edited and translated by David Luke and Nigel Reeves.  It includes eight stories, 
including “The Earthquake in Chile” as well as a very informative introduction. Kleist lived a life worthy of a Romantic poet, ending in a suicide pact with a Lady)

The story is set in Santiago, Chile, in 1647, just after a great earthquake.  A young man is in prison, waiting to be executed for taking the virginity and impregnating the young daughter of a Nobel family.  She has just given birth to their child.  She will also be executed but in an act of benevolence she will be hung, not burned at the stake as was normal.  Just before the man prepares, in his prison cell, to hang himself, a powerful very destructive earthquake breaks down his confines.  After escaping, Kleist does a wonderful job depicting the chaos brought on by the quake and the reaction of the church authorities to the quake, the man sets out to find his love.  She is also been freed and is desperately seeking him.  

I do not want to spoil the ending for others but needless to say it is high tragedy.

I found this a very entertaining story.  I have five more left to read, I hope that means five more German Literature Months for The Reading Life.

If you have a favourite 19th century German Short Story, please leave a comment.

Mel ü  







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