A collection of previously unpublished short prose by one of the most
influential figures of twentieth-century fiction. Little Snow
Landscape opens in 1905 with an encomium to Robert Walser’s homeland
and concludes in 1933 with a meditation on his childhood in Biel, the
town of his birth, published in the last of his four years in the
cantonal mental hospital in Waldau outside Bern. Between these two
poles, the book maps Walser’s outer and inner wanderings in various
narrative modes. Here you find him writing in the persona of a girl
composing an essay on the seasons, of Don Juan at the moment he senses
he’s outplayed his role, and of Turkey’s last sultan shortly after
he’s deposed. In other stories, a man falls in love with the heroine
of the penny dreadful he’s reading (and she with him?), and the lady
of a house catches her servant spread out on the divan casually
reading a classic. Three longer autobiographical
stories—“Wenzel,” “Würzburg,” and “Louise”—brace the
whole. In addition to a representative offering of Walser’s short
prose, of which he was one of literature’s most original,
multifarious, and lucid practitioners, Little Snow Landscape forms a
kind of novel, however apparently plotless, from the vast unfinishable
one he was constantly writing.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781681375236
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Random House Publishing Services
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter