Read exclusively in the early hours, the last, il ritorno in patria, section of Sebald's Vertigo, has implanted itself in the back brain. Sebald went back to W., the village of his childhood, for the first time in thirty years, and stayed, we read, in the same building, an inn, he'd lived in as a child, for an indefinite period, he told the landlady, during which time he was virtually the only guest.
He inhabits W. as he did when he was a child: indefinitely.
The past is a prison, a foreign country. People speak differently there. If they speak at all.
In the post today came Lost Time, the prison-camp talks on Proust given in 1941 by Jõsef Czapski without a book to consult. Erich Auerbach similarly wrote Mimesis in a bookless place. Remembering what you've read when you're far from books (even a short way down the road or in another room in your own house) is one of the most acute exercises a human can perform.
In the meantime, unhappily, irritated, reading Shyness and Dignity by Sag Solstad. I do not take kindly to the whinge-boring-teacher story. Talk to them, I want to say. Talk.
A loose occasional reflection on what I'm reading, how I inhabit books and they inhabit me.
Tuesday, 15 January 2019
Sebald, Vertigo, Dag Solstad, Josef Czapski, Auerbach
Labels:
Erich Auerbach
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il ritorno in patria. Vertigo
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Jõsef Czapski
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Lost Time
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Mimesis
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Sag Solstad
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Sebald
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Shyness and Dignity
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