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Where literature and art intersect, with an emphasis on W.G. Sebald and literature with embedded photographs
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Posts from the ‘Nescio’ Category
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Welcome to Vertigo
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I began Vertigo in 2007 primarily as a vehicle for writing about W.G. Sebald and the history of fiction and poetry that have photographs embedded as part of the author's original text. Now I also write about a broader range of books that interest me. You can see a dozen or so of the posts I like best (from more than 600) by clicking on the My Favorite Posts tab. And check out my yearly Reading Log, where I write a short paragraph about every book I read. The Categories list below represents only a handful of the topics covered in this blog. To see if an author, book, or topic has been discussed somewhere on Vertigo, use the Search field, which is found below the Categories listing. At the Downloadable Bibliography tab above, you can download an extensive bibliography of more than 700 books of Photo-Embedded Fiction & Poetry from the 1890s to the present, plus a full Author/Artist Index. To contact me, just leave a comment at any post and I will answer. Follow me at @vertigoterry.bsky.social
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In addition to W.G. Sebald, there are several writers that I have written about multiple times on Vertigo over the last two decades, writers whose books I have found to be consistently worthy of deep and multiple readings. They are (in alphabetical order): Sergio Chejfec, Don Mee Choi, Teju Cole, Dorothee Elmiger, Mathias Énard, Julian Gracq, Esther Kinsky, Wolfgang Koeppen, Micheline Aharonian Marcom, Javier Marías, Joseph McElroy, Patrick Modiano, David Peace's Red Riding Quartet), Ricardo Piglia, Ann Quin, and Enrique Vila-Matas.
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May 9
Nescio’s Rhetoric of Regret
An aura of melancholy pervades Nescio’s Amsterdam Stories, the first English translation of the Dutch writer whose real name was Jan Hendrik Frederik Grönloh (1882-1961). Even the young boys in his stories know they will not stay young forever and probably won’t amount to much when they grow up.
There are a number of reviews already for this recently-released title, so I thought I would limit myself to a few words about what is, for me, the masterpiece of the collection. “Little Poet,” written in June and July of 1917, is the compressed biography of a man who, year by year, lets family, responsibility and career chip away at his youthful determination to be a writer. It’s a common, almost trite theme, but in Nescio’s telling the story becomes devastatingly poignant. Halfway through the story (it’s just about forty pages long), the narrator sums up the situation of the little poet in a synopsis that is both subtle and compact. Here’s about half of what he writes:
[skipping on a page and a half]
One of the things I find so wonderful about this passage, which is typical for Nescio – and “Little Poet”, in particular – is the way in which Nescio uses brief flashes of free indirect narration to undercut the message of his own narrator’s tale. He presents the life summary quoted above in the more or less objective voice of the narrator, and, from the outside, the little poet’s life story is a bit of a rags-to-riches success story of a poor boy becoming a responsible citizen. Except that Nescio keeps adding those little throw-away hints that seem to pop directly from the mind of the little poet himself. “That was when he bought that white flannel suit.” “He took to smoking four-cent cigars … he had a box of them at home.” And: “those thick wool socks.” These are the kind of little self-accusatory asides that one says to one’s self when taking stock. They turn the apparent success story into one that represents utter failure.
Not all of Nescio’s stories were as engaging as “Little Poet,” but when his writing is at its best he creates narrative voices of the most subtle and intelligent kind.
Nescio. Amsterdam Stories. NYRB, 2012. Translated from the Dutch by Damion Searls, with an introduction by Joseph O’Neill.