Christa Wolf
Dec. 1st, 2011 06:41 pmI just learned that Christa Wolf died. She was 84, so it's not a case if "too young", but I feel sad nonetheless. Some of her books coloured and changed the shape of my thoughts, and even those I didn't feel were as good never failed to make me thinks.
Just one favourite: "Kein Ort, Nirgends", a novella about a fictional meeting between Karoline von Günderode and Heinrich von Kleist, two of our most language-sensitive poets if the early nineteenth century. They both committed suicide, and they did have shared friends, but as far as we know they never met. Wolf writes a novella around a single day in which they do meet, and she does it in such an unsensational, empathic way that it never feels trite or like the literary equivalent of dark fic. Moreover, her dialogue feels so real, feels true to the poets, and this given who they were is an amazing feet of itself. And she leaves them three dimensional, with flaws, instead of going for the future martyr for art approach. It's beautiful to read, and to me is every bit as good as Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway".
May she rest in peace.
Just one favourite: "Kein Ort, Nirgends", a novella about a fictional meeting between Karoline von Günderode and Heinrich von Kleist, two of our most language-sensitive poets if the early nineteenth century. They both committed suicide, and they did have shared friends, but as far as we know they never met. Wolf writes a novella around a single day in which they do meet, and she does it in such an unsensational, empathic way that it never feels trite or like the literary equivalent of dark fic. Moreover, her dialogue feels so real, feels true to the poets, and this given who they were is an amazing feet of itself. And she leaves them three dimensional, with flaws, instead of going for the future martyr for art approach. It's beautiful to read, and to me is every bit as good as Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway".
May she rest in peace.