Author

Contributions

  • Strässle, Thomas, 1972- editor, writer of afterword - Contributor
  • Unser, Margit, editor - Contributor
  • Hoban, Wieland, translator - Contributor

Publication

2017 - Seagull Books, England

Language

English

Word Count

55,000 words, Guess

Page Count

220 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • OCLC Control Number958798709
  • Better World Books9780857424334

Classifications

  • DDC838/.91209
  • LCCPT2611.R814 Z46 2017
  • LCCPT2611.R814

Description

Max Frisch (1911-91) was a giant of twentieth-century German literature. When Frisch moved into a new apartment in Berlin's Sarrazinstrasse, he began keeping a journal, which he came to call the Berlin Journal. A few years later, he emphasized in an interview that this was by no means a "scribbling book," but rather a book "fully composed." The journal is one of the great treasures of Frisch's literary estate, but the author imposed a retention period of twenty years from the date of his death because of the "private things" he noted in it. This work now marks the first publication of excerpts from Frisch's journal. Here, the unmistakable Frisch is back, full of doubt, with no illusions, and with a playfully sharp eye for the world. This work pulls from the years 1946-49 and 1966-71 [that is 1973-1974]. Observations about the writer's everyday life stand alongside narrative and essayistic texts, as well as finely-drawn portraits of colleagues like Günter Grass, Uwe Johnson, Wolf Biermann, and Christa Wolf, among others. Its foremost quality, though, is the extraordinary acuity with which Frisch observed political and social conditions in East Germany while living in West Berlin.

Subjects

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