Showing posts with label Jurek Becker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jurek Becker. Show all posts

Saturday, March 21, 2015

The Boxer by Jurek Becker (1976, translated by Alessandra Bastagli)

I owe my great thanks to Max u for the Amazon Gift Card that allowed me to read The Boxer



The Boxer by Jurek Becker (born 1937 in Lotz, Poland, died Thumby, Germany, 1997) is about a concentration camp survivor and his relationship to his son.  The man's wife, he was Jewish, was taken away, his two year old son put in a children's concentration camp, where survival rates were incredibly low, and he himself spent six years in a slave labor camp.  Upon his release he receives a pension and priority housing as a form of reparation, he goes to work as a bookkeeper for a big time black market operator, he has two long term affairs, he makes a close friend who kills himself and he goes to an office that helps people try to find out what happened to individuals last known to be in camps.  Miraculously he finds his son, now eight.   Not long ago I read a nonfiction book about the emotional impact their years in the camps had on survivors.  Becker's book covers this in the case of one person brilliantly.  The man, he was once a boxer, tries to relate to his son and his girlfriends and they to him. Everyone is damaged in some way by the Holocaust years. 

The Boxer is very understated but it is very moving and deeply insightful.  The story is structured as if it were a government interviewer taking down the man's story, part of the drama of the novel is the man, now in his late sixties getting to know the much younger interviewer.  It covers over twenty five years in the life of the man and his son.  The relationship of the man, he had his son trained to box when he was bullied at school, is not easy to understand and is full of sadness.

I have previously read and posted on Becker's Jacob the Lier and The Wall and other Stories.  Jacob the Lier is the best selling of his books, per Amazon, and I would suggest you start there.

The Boxer is a first rate novel focusing on an important aspect of the Holocaust, the fate of survivors.

 
The kindle edition of this book has numerous run together words.  It was obviously never proof read after conversion to the kindle format.  Jurek Becker deserves more respect than this and so do book buyers.  
 
Mel u



Thursday, November 20, 2014

Juret Becker - Two Short Stories- "The Suspect" and "The Most Popular Family Story" (from The Wall and other Stories)

Two Short Stories by the author of Jakob the Lier, Juret Becker






There are still several days left in German Literature Month IV.  Lots of time left to participate. There are already over a hundred posts, reading through them is much like a fine class in German literature at a top academy.




Works I have so far read for German Literature Month 2014



1.   Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse

2.   Gertrude by Hermann Hesse 

3.  "Diary of a School Boy" by Robert Walser (no post)

4.  Steppenwolf by Herman Hesse

5.  Burning Secret by Stefan Zweig 1925

6.  Life Goes On by Hans Keilson

7.  Comedy in a Minor Key by Hans Keilson

8.  "The Wall" by Jurek Becker

9.  "Romeo" by Jurek Becker

10.   "The Invisible City" by Jurek Becker.

11.  Wittgenstein's Nephew by Thomas Bernhard

12. "Dostoevsky's Idiot" by Robert Walser

13.  "French Newspapers" by Robert Wasler 

14.  Jakob the Lier by Jurek Becker

15.  The Trial by Franz Kafka 1915,

16.  "The Seamstress" by Rainer Maria Rilke  1894

17.  "The Experiement or the Victory of Children" by Unica Zürn 1950

18.  "The Star Above the Forest" by Stefan Zweig. 1924

19.  "Saint Cecilia or the Power of Music" by Heinrich von Kleist 1810

20.  Amok by Stefan Zweig 1923

21.  Concrete 1982

22.  "Kleist in Thun" by Robert Walser 1913

23.  "Incident at Lake Geneva" by Stefan Zweig (1924)

24.  "The Governess" by Stefan Zweig 1927

25.  "The Sandman" by E. T. A. Hoffmann 1817

26.  "The Secrets of the Princess of Kagran" by Ingeborg Bachmann 1971

27.  "Twilight" by Stefan Zweig 1928

28.   "The Lunatic" by Georg Heym 1913

29.    "Dissection" by Georg Heym 1913 - no post 

30.   "Blackbird" by Robert Musil

31.  "The Kiss" by Robert Walser 1914. - no post

Last week I read and posted on three intriguing stories by Jurek Becker, all translated by his wife in their first appearance in English in the just published collection, The Wall and other Stories by Jurek Becker.  Becker was born in Poland, after the war he and his family moved to the GDR (East Germany) where many felt Jews were more welcome.  (1937 to 1997). He stayed in the GDR when many Holocaust survivors left for America or Palestein. Much of his fiction focuses on the Holocaust.  I then read and posted on his wonderful Jakob the Lier is set in the Lodz Ghetto in Poland during the time of the Nazi occupation.  At the time Lodz was second only to Warsaw as the city with the highest Jewish population. Becker was born there.  

"The Suspect".  1980, published in translation in 2014

 "The Suspect" feels like it is set in East Germany.   It almost feels like a deliberate creation of a Kafkaesque story.  A man begins to think he is being followed, observed by the secret police.  He has nothing but his suspicions to substantiate this.  He begins to go out of his way to act totally normal.   
At his job he works hard, but not too hard.  He fears his girl friend may have informed on him so he drops her.  Nothing happens, no revelations, no conclusions.  

"The Most Popular Family Story".   1981, published in translation in 2014

This is a very funny delightful story.  We are at a big family gathering.  Uncle Gideon is getting ready to tell a family story.  Becker   Does a very good job of describing the big family gathering.  As Uncle Gideon starts his story, everybody has heard it before, we learn he does not like traveling but went to London for seven days to buy machinery for the family factory.  He does not like the English food and cannot locate a Kosher restaurant.  The man he bought the machinery from insists on taking him around London.  Then the man tells Gideon that he needs Gideon to fill in for him at a costume party as he has a business scheduling conflict.  Gideon buys himself an elaborate clown outfit and makes up his face.  The party is at a large mansion.  He is the first to arrive.  The host is in formal attire.  Compressing a lot, it is not a costume party but a formal dinner party for London's elite.  There Uncle Gideon sits, wanting to kill the man who sent him their in a clown outfit.  This is a very funny, warm hearted family story I liked a lot.

Both stories were translated by Justin Becker.

Mel von ü
 

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Jurek Becker - Three Short Stories by the Author of Jacob the Lier - From The Wall and other Stories -2014





The schedule and guidelines for participation are on the event webpage.  Just reading the  posts of all the other participants is tremendously informative. There is an interesting contest or two and some prizes to be won.  One of the tasks participants are charged with is reading a work first published in 2014 and this collection qualifies.  

I am very happy to be once again participating in German Literature Month, hosted by Caroline of Beauty is a Sleeping Cat and Lizzy of Lizzy's Literary Life.   Events like this are one of the great things about being part of the international book blog community.  I know there is a lot of work that goes into a month long event and I offer my thanks to Lizzy and Caroline.

One of my goals for German Literature Month 2014 was to discover some new to me writers of high quality.  With the month over a third done, my first new to me writer I greatly admire is Jurek Becker.  Becker, a German born in Poland (1937 to 1997), is best know for his holocaust novel, Jacob the Lier which was made into a movie  with Robin Williams in the lead role.


Some months ago I was kindly given an advance review copy of The Wall and other Stories by Jurek Becker.  I decided to save it for German Literature Month. ( It is now in print and is available as a Kindle edition.). There are five short stories in the collection and a selection from Jacob the Lier.

So far I have read three of the stories and will post on them today and hopefully the other two before the month is over.  Two of the stories deal with a child's experience of life in a Jewish Ghetto in Poland during World War Two and one amazing story centers on a foreign worker living in Berlin after the war during the period before the wall came down.  

Works I have so far read for German Literature Month 2014

1.   Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse

2.   Gertrude by Hermann Hesse 

3.  "Diary of a School Boy" by Robert Walser (no post)

4.  Steppenwolf by Herman Hesse

5.  Burning Secret by Stefan Zweig

6.  Life Goes On by Hans Keilson

7.  Comedy in a Minor Key by Hans Keilson

8.  "The Wall" by Jurek Becker

9.  "Romeo" by Jurek Becker

10.   "The Invisible City" by Jurek Becker.

"Invisible Cities" 

"Invisible Cities", first published in 1990, is the shortest work in the collection. It is almost an essay.   Becker lived with his parents in the Lodz Ghetto in Poland under German control, from the  age two to five. Then for a while in a concentration camp. He and his parentd survived.   Of course for him life in the Ghetto was just normal life, starvation, inspection, and constant fear of his parents and the violence around them, the disappearing of those he knew, were just normal. Now the war is long over, he is a grown man, a well known author who writes stories about childhood in the Ghetto.  As a child and young man he never talked much about those years with his parents and now they are gone.  He is involved right now in putting together an exhibit on the Warsaw Ghetto.  He is trying to construct or find the lost memories of his experiences from the photos,trying to see a now to him invisible city.  We sense his sadness at the permanent loss memories, a loss of history.  Sort of you feel he is a bit ashamed of making a handsome living from experiences he cannot remember.  

"Romeo"

"Romeo, initially published in 1980, is about a foreign worker, I guessed he was Polish, living in East Berlin but working, in the legally divided and separated by the infamous Berlin Wall city of Berlin, in West Berlin.  He is when we meet him fairly newly arrived, there to send money home, and learning the tricks of getting by while living in the divided city.  Everyday he has to cross through a check point, pay a fee and exchange his money.  All this traveling eats into his earnings.  He meets a Turkish worker who teaches him a lot of ways to save money. The more he can send home the sooner he can go back to his country.  The best idea is to find a West Berlin girlfriend he can live with to avoid the travel expenses and the border crossing fees. Of course the girls will want a bit of money, only fair.
  His friend takes him along to a bar said to be good for meeting German girls.  Compressing a good bit, he does meet a Germsn girl, not in his words , "too whorish looking" and seems shy at first.   Just an average looking girl.  I don't want to tell the end but their first encounter is beautifully done, you sense the great loneliness in both. The sexual encounter is very well narrated. You can tell it has been a very long time for both of them.   The girl is kind of prostituting herself and the man plans to use her for a place  to live, of course he will give her money, but in a country destroyed by war one cannot be too squeamish about puritanical strictures.  

"The Wall"

"The Wall", the title story and longest one in the collection, was first published in 1980.  It is told by a boy, maybe ten, living with his parents, in a Jewish Ghetto.   There are daily line ups for head counts to make sure no one has tried to climb over the wall.  The Germans are continually shirking the size of the Ghetto by moving the wall, constricting the people inside.  Germans are seen as subhuman beasts.  One day his family is ordered to move out of their house, taking only a few things.  Now they live in a terribly small place, all sleep in one bed.   Of course boys will be boys and a neighbor boy bolder than the narrator suggests they climb over the wall at night, when they reason all the Germans are sleeping, go back to vacated houses and see what they can find.   The trip across the wall is very dangerous and exciting, perfectly told from the boy's point of view.   I don't want to spoil the ending of this story but something amazing happens.

These were three great stories.  There are three more in the collection and I hope to read and post on them this month.  All are translated for the first time into English.

Author Bio (from the wepage of the Goethe Institute)

Jurek Becker was born in 1937 in Łódź, Poland. He was interned in the Łódź Ghetto with his parents from 1940 to 1944 and was subsequently a prisoner in the Ravensbrück and Sachsenhausen concentration camps. After the war, Becker's father took him to East Berlin, where they were among the few surviving Jews who chose to stay in Germany. He became a screenwriter and novelist. A dissident in East Germany, in 1977 he emigrated to West Berlin. He died in 1997.



I am going to read Jacob the Lier very soon.






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