Grove: A Field Novel

Grove: A Field Novel

$16.95

Esther Kinsky

Translated from the German by Caroline Schmidt

Winner of the Leipzig Book Prize
Winner of the Düsseldorf Book Prize

An unnamed narrator, recently bereaved, travels to Olevano, a small village southeast of Rome. It is winter, and from her temporary residence on a hill between village and cemetery, she embarks on walks and outings, exploring the banal and the sublime with equal dedication and intensity. She recalls her travels in 1970s Italy, which she often visited as a child with her father. Fragmented impressions and memories—of Communist party rallies, roadside restaurants, film sequences, bird life, and the ubiquitous Etruscan necropoli—combine into a mosaic of a bygone era. Then the narrator visits Northern Italy, between Ferrara and the Po estuary, some years after the bereavement. She looks for the garden of the Finzi-Contini family, walks along deserted canals and explores abandoned seaside resorts. Seeing, describing, naming the world around her is her way of redefining her place within it. Written in a rich and poetic style, Grove is an exquisite novel of grief, love, and landscapes.

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PRAISE FOR GROVE

“A philosophical jewel seeking revelation in interstices, absences, ruptures, and the passages between existence and memory."—Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review

Grove is a story of an existence stilled by loss, but the promise of life, and with it renewal and hope, pulses gently but steadily at its heart.”—Lucy Scholes, Financial Times

PRAISE FOR RIVER

“A magnificent novel.”—The New Yorker

"The woman who has fled her own hinterland for the ragged fringe of London discovers a dreamlike city of melancholy magic."—The Economist

“Esther Kinsky’s unnamed narrator observes and remembers, piling up beautiful, silt-like layers of description and memory until it becomes difficult to know which is which . . . This is a book to relish.”—The Guardian

“The form of River mirrors its content; its consciousness flows with a sense that, like water to the sea, it will one day lose itself.”—Times Literary Supplement

“A beautiful exploration of memory’s unbreakable bonds with its natural surroundings.”—Culture Trip

"River is an unusual and stealthy sort of book in that it’s the opposite of what it appears to be—which is a rather apt dissimulation, as it turns out. Yes, it rifles through both the rich and rank materials of the world, turning over its trinkets and its tat, in a manner that is initially quite familiar—however, this curious inventory demonstrates an eye for the grotesque and does not hold the world aloft, or in place. Here, details blur boundaries rather than reaffirming them, positing a worldview that is haunted and uncanny. Shifting through unremarkable terrain we encounter the departed, the exiled, the underneath, the other side. We are on firm ground, always; yet whether that ground is here or there, now or then, is, increasingly, a distinction that is difficult and perhaps irrelevant to make. Sea or sky, boy or girl, east or west, king or vagrant, silt or gold; by turns grubby, theatrical, and exquisite, we are closer to the realm of Bakhtin’s carnival than we are to the well-trod paths of psychogeography. Kinsky’s River does indeed force us to stop in our tracks and take in the opposite side."—Claire-Louise Bennett, author of Pond

"Esther Kinsky’s novel outshines everything that has recently been published in the German language with patient stamina. It is full of culture without being erudite, it is full of knowledge without being smart-aleck. River is a democratic book, witty, wise and touchingly beautiful."—Katharina Teutsch, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

"This book is a sensation of language."—Susanne Mayer, Die Zeit

"No matter whether Kinsky describes things, foreign people, or landscapes, the surplus love she has at her disposal becomes visible in the sensitive prose in which she sees the world."—Hans-Peter Kunisch, Süddeutsche Zeitung

"Brought to life by language that is both precise and multi-layered, River is a magnificent book on the disappearance of landscape."—Le Monde

PRODUCT INFO

First Published: July 21, 2020
Fiction/Literary
5.25 x 8 | 287 pages
Rights: NA
978-1-945492-38-9 (paperback)

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