Anniversaries
Johnson, Uwe
Genre:
A landmark of 20th Century literature about New York in the late 1960s
now in English for the first time. As a novel
Uwe Johnson's masterpiece
Anniversaries
is at once daringly simple in conception and wonderfully complex and engaging in effect. Late in 1967
Johnson
already one of the most celebrated German novelists of his generation
set out to write a book that would take the form of an entry for every day of the year that lay ahead. The first section was dated August 20
and Johnson had of course no idea what the year would bring--that was part of the challenge--but he did have his main character--Gesine Cresspahl
a German emigre living on the Upper West Side of New York City and working as a translator for a bank who is the single mother of a ten-year-old daughter
Marie. The book would tell the story of a year in the life of this little family in relation to the unfolding story of the year
as winnowed from the pages of the New York Times
of which Gesine is a devoted if wary reader. These stories would in turn be overlayed by another--Gesine is 34
born just as Hitler was coming to power
and she has decided to tell Marie the story of her grandparents' lives and of her own rural childhood in Nazi Germany. It is important that Marie know where and what she comes from. The days of the year are also anniversaries of years past. The world that was and the world of the 1960s--with the struggle for civil rights leading to riots in American cities and
abroad
the escalating destruction of the Vietnam War--are
in the end
one world. Anniversaries was published in four volumes over the more than ten years that it took Johnson to write it
and as the volumes came out it became clear that this was one the great twentieth-century novels. The book courts comparison to Joyce's Ulysses
the book of a day
and to Proust's In Search of Lost Time
the book of a lifetime
but it stands apart in its dense polyphonic interplay of voices and stories. Anniversaries is many books--the book of a mother and daughter
of a family and its generations
of the country and the city
and of two times and two countries that seem farther apart perhaps than they are. It is a novel of private life
a political novel
and a new kind of historical novel
reckoning not only with past history but with history in the making. Monumental and intimate
sweeping in vision and full of incident
richly detailed and endlessly absorbing
Anniversaries
now for the first time available in English in a brilliant new translation by Damion Searls
is nothing short of a revelation.
Target Readership: