Kazuo Ishiguro, Joshua Ferris, Detlef Opitz, Alice Notley, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell, Bram Stoker, Peter Weiss

De Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook alle tags voor Kazuo Ishiguro op dit blog.

Uit: The Remains of the Day

“I believe I can best highlight the difference between the generations by expressing myself figuratively. Butlers of my father’s generation, I would say, tended to see the world in terms of a ladder – the houses of royalty, dukes and the lords from the oldest families placed at the top, those of ‘new money’ lower down and so on, until one reached a point below which the hierarchy was determined simply by wealth – or the lack of it. Any butler with ambition simply did his best to climb as high up this ladder as possible, and by and large, the higher he went, the greater was his professional prestige. Such are, of course, precisely the values embodied in the Hayes Society’s idea of a ‘distinguished household’, and the fact that it was confidently making such pronouncements as late as 1929 shows clearly why the demise of that society was inevitable, if not long overdue. For by that time, such thinking was quite out of step with that of the finest men emerging to the forefront of our profession. For our generation, I believe, it is accurate to say, viewed the world not as a ladder, but more as a wheel. Perhaps I might explain this further.
It is my impression that our generation was the first to recognize something which had passed the notice of all earlier generations: namely that the great decisions of the world are not, in fact, arrived at simply in the public chambers, or else during a handful of days given over to an international conference under the full gaze of the public and the press. Rather, debates are conducted, and crucial decisions arrived at, in the privacy and calm of the great houses of this country. What occurs under the public gaze with so much pomp and ceremony is often the conclusion, or mere ratification, of what has taken place over weeks or months within the walls of such houses. To us, then, the world was a wheel, revolving with these great houses at the hub, their mighty decisions emanating out to all else, rich and poor, who revolved around them. It was the aspiration of all those of us with professional ambition to work our way as close to this hub as we were each of us capable. For we were, as I say, an idealistic generation for whom the question was not simply one of how well one practised one’s skills, but to what end one did so; each of us harboured the desire to make our own small contribution to the creation of a better world, and saw that, as professionals, the surest means of doing so would be to serve the great gentlemen of our times in whose hands civilization had been entrusted.”

 

 
Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

 

De Amerikaanse schrijver Joshua Ferris werd op 8 november 1974 in Danville, Illinois geboren. Zie ook alle tags voor Joshua Ferris op dit blog.

Uit: The Dinner Party

“They come in,” he said, “we take their coats. Everyone talks in a big hurry as if we didn’t have four long hours ahead of us. We self-medicate with alcohol. A lot of things are discussed, different issues. Everyone laughs a lot, but later no one can say what exactly was so witty. Compliments on the food. A couple of monologues. Then they start to yawn, we start to yawn. They say, ‘We should think about leaving, huh?,’ and we politely look away, like they’ve just decided to take a crap on the dinner table. Everyone stands, one of us gets their coats, peppy goodbyes. We all say what a lovely evening, do it again soon, blah-blah-blah. And then they leave and we talk about them and they hit the streets and talk about us.”
“What would make you happy?” she asked.
“A blow job.”
“Let’s wait until they get here for that,” she said.
She slid her finger along the blade to free the clinging onion. He handed her her glass. “Drink your wine,” he said. She took a sip. He left the kitchen.
He sat on the sofa and resumed reading an article. Then he got up and returned to the kitchen and poured himself a new drink.
“That’s another thing,” he said. “Their big surprise. Even their goddam surprises are predictable.”
“You need to act surprised for their sake,” she said.
“Wait for a little opening,” he said, “a little silence, and then he’ll say, he’ll be very coy, he’ll say, ‘Why don’t you tell them?’ And she’ll say, ‘No, you,’ and he’ll say, ‘No, you,’ and then she’ll say, ‘O.K., O.K., I’ll tell them.’ And we’ll take in the news like we’re genuinely surprised—like, holy shit, can you believe she’s knocked up, someone run down for a Lotto ticket, someone tell Veuve Clicquot, that bastard will want to know! And that’s just the worst, how predictable our response to their so-called news will be.”

 

 
Joshua Ferris (Danville, 8 november 1974)

 

De Duitse schrijver Detlef Opitz werd geboren op 8 november 1956 in Steinheidel-Erlabrunn. Zie ook alle tags voor Detlef Opitz op dit blog.

Uit: Der Büchermörder

“Denn das Bankhaus Frege & Co. liegt von der Grimmaischen Gasse aus besehen quer übern Markt, dann nur sieben Häuser die Katharinenstraße hinein, linkerhand; Nummer 372. Wie später die Ermittlungen ergaben, war zur etwa selben Stunde, in der der Anschlag auf Schmidt geschah, im Fregeschen Comptoir eine Person erschienen, die sich als Hr. Siegel aus Elsterberg bei Stolpe ausgab, um elf ihrer Stadtobligationen zu verkaufen. Dem Hrn. Obercassirer Witzendorf kam der Mann vom Ansehen her zwar vor, wie ein bestimmter, hier in Leipzig wohnender Hr. Doctor Dorn, doch er dachte hierüber nicht weiter nach. Desfalls, es sollte etwas nicht gut sein, machte ihm sein Gegenüber ein gar zu besonnenes Gesicht, schien auch keineswegs in Eile, oder der hohen Summe wegen in erkennbarer Aufregung befangen. Nach kurzer Rücksprache mit seinem Principalen zahlte er die Summe baar aus, und zwar nominal Gold in preussischen Friedrichsd’or, französischen Louisd’or und braunschweigischen und sächsischen Thalern, einen kleinen Rest aber silbern in Preussisch-Courant. Der Verkäufer zählte genau noch einmal alles durch, schob 10 halbe Louisd’or zurück und erbat sich ganze dafür, verbrachte dann umständlich die vielen Stücke in seine ledernen Beutel und war, anbei, auch einem Schwätzchen nicht abgeneigt über diese und iene Course, und welche derzeit die günstigsten warn. In aller Weltenruhe, als hätte er nur eine schlechte Lotterie eingeholt oder eine harmlose Tratte vertauscht, verließ er schließlich das Bureau unter freundlichem Grüßen.
Genau zur gleichen Minute, als bedachter Hr. Siegel aus Elsterberg, als der Verkäufer elfer Obligationen, nur kurze Zeit nach seinem Weggang noch einmal zurück ins Comptoir spazirt kam und Bitte vortrug um eine Note über das Geschäft, welche er vorhin vergessen, genau im selben Moment sank, nur einige hundert Schritte entfernt, zwischen Schalter und Actenrepositorium des Schoßamts, der Kaufmann Schmidt zum zweiten Male binnen halber Stunde in sich selbst hinein.”

 

 
Detlef Opitz (Steinheidel-Erlabrunn, 8 november 1956)

 

De Amerikaanse dichteres Alice Notley werd geboren op 8 november 1945 in Bisbee, Arizona. Zie ook alle tags voor Allice Notley op dit blog.

 

The Elements

You must do battle with Eros I am
more worried about space, pressed for details
collapsed in chaos with my sword holding up the sky the
girl said. They cared not for love lying ever that they loved
But I your leader wounded in gender and bleeding
for Eros fought it away from my true beginning as now.

Always climbing that hill in several ways.
One goes past the Baptist Church and through the ugly
trees, houses I only visualize in dreams
you have no right to pursue me to my origins man
as bipolar as the one candidate, forgettable
as the other. We once lived in a postwar barracks blue
heated by a black stove of assumptions
Eros a youth admits no equal; Aphrodite the slut;
Chaos is whom I admire that keeps forgetting
love in favor of this terrible mixity I am
for example … these poems. Out of the pre-beginning

a different beauty. They want you to confess
something like in church, that a man will
save you. But I am your leader savior and poet
I am your general out of the desert thee
most ardent void precursor of love
Eros approaches again not the man but quality
sculpted genitals arush with the words
of unreason: I will never die. Which I is I
if I can remain chaotic I’ll tell you who you are

that you’ve never anticipated, but know
the only one. Without a thing. To be is not
to have; nor to belong; nor to have been born.
You are not the child of earth. Beauty still thy name.

 

Poem 2

You hear that heroic big land music?
Land a one could call one.
He starred, had lives, looks down:
windmill still now they buy only
snow cows. Part of a dream, she
had a long waist he once but yet
never encircled, and now I’m
in charge of this, this donkey with
a charmed voice. Elly, I’m
being sad thinking of Daddy.
He marshaled his private lady,
did she wear a hat or the
other side? get off my own land? We
were all born on it to die on
with no writin’ on it. But who are
you to look back, well he’s
humming ‘From this valley,’ who’s gone.
Support and preserve me, father. Oh
Daddy, who can stand it?

 

 
Alice Notley (Bisbee, 8 november 1945)

 

De Duitse dichter en schrijver Herbert Hindringer werd geboren op 8 november 1974 in Passau. Zie ook alle tags voor Herbert Hindringer op dit blog.

 

Profi-Teufelskerle

laufen 100 Meter Amok unter 3 Minuten, einmal um die ganze Welt
ein Staffellauf durch alle Gesichtsbücher, oh Gott, wir sind fassungslos
ihr auch? Nur Amy Winehouse als Stolperstein
Fuck Amy, es sind 77 unschuldige Menschen gestorben, oh

meine Güte, deine Güte, was für ein Arschloch, Hans-Peter Uhl
(CSU) sagt: In Wahrheit wurde diese Tat im Internet geboren

Da nehmen wir doch gleich Erziehungsurlaub, bilden uns fort und weiter
im Text: Wir sind die deutsche Synchronstimme des norwegischen Volkes
immerhin sind wir nicht verfassungslos und wachsen sorglos auf

dem Boden der Tatsachen fest
gehen in die Kneipe, denn draußen findet das wahre Leben statt
Tod statt, das gilt auch für hier drinnen, ein Bier, wir nicken und schütteln Köpfe
und Hände, wissen mehr als andere: In was für Zeiten wir nur leben

aber nicht lieben, Herzschmerz ist eine App, die man als Wecker benutzt
in den finsteren Nächten, in denen Haustiere sterben
wacht man als Achtjähriger auf und Satan liegt unter dem Bett

schnurrt wie eine Erinnerung, so wird der Kopf zum Fall von ganz oben
wartet auf Knien und auf Gedeih und Verderb und auf den nächsten Knall

 

 
Herbert Hindringer (Passau, 8 november 1974)

 

De Duitse schrijfster Elfriede Brüning werd geboren op 8 november 1910 in Berlijn. Zie ook alle tags voor Elfriede Brüning op dit blog.

Uit: Und außerdem ist Sommer

“Trude Klein saß vor der Schreibmaschine und wartete den Büroschluß ab. Gegenüber las der Doktor Korrekturen. Es sah aus, als sei er eingeschlafen. Der Kopf lag halb auf dem Tisch, und die Augen waren von gebogenen Lidern weit überzogen. Aber jetzt fing er an, mit den Rändern der Fahnen zu knistern, wie es seine Gewohnheit war. Er steckte den Bleistift zwischen die Lippen und sah auf. „Schreibt man ‚Waage‘ mit Doppel-a oder nicht?“ fragte er langsam. „In meiner Jugendzeit …“ Hier unterbrach er sich. Aber obgleich Fräulein Klein hätte antworten können, saß sie stillundwartetegeduldigab.DerDoktorstütztedenEllenbogen auf den Tisch, das heißt, er ließ ihn über die Tischplatte gleiten, von rechts nach links und an der Kante entlang, bis er den richtigen Punkt gefunden hatte. Nun beugte er sich weit über den Tisch und legte das Kinn in die flache Hand. „Ja, in meiner Jugendzeit schrieb man ‚Waage‘ noch mit Doppel-a, dann nahm man im Laufe der Zeit ein a weg, soweit ich unterrichtet bin. Aber ich bin mir nicht im klaren, was die neueste Rechtschreibung vorsieht. Ich könnte mir denken …“ „Jedenfalls schreibt man es mit Doppel-a“, kürzte die Stenotypistin ab. Sie stand auf und ging an den Regalen vorbei zum Ofen. Die Uhr zeigte auf zwei. Der Doktor wandte sich auf seinem Stuhl um und sah dem Fräulein nach, wie es den Handspiegel auf dem Sims plazierte und behutsam eine Mütze auf die Haare schob. „Wollen Sie schon gehen, Kleine?“ „Natürlich. Um zwei ist Schluß. Übrigens sollen Sie mich nicht Kleine nennen.“ Der Doktor entzündete ein Streichholz und warf es auf den Boden. „Wollen Sie nicht drinnen Ihren Chef fragen, ob er noch was für Sie hat, und nicht einfach lostürmen? Und daß ‚Kleine‘ kein Kosewort ist, sondern nur die weibliche Form Ihres Namens, wissen Sie ja.“ „Sie haben ein Streichholz auf die Erde geworfen.“ Gerade knurrte der Hausapparat dreimal hintereinander. Trude riß die Mütze vom Kopf und ging mit gespreizten Schritten zum Chef in den Nebenraum. Als sie wiederkam, waren zehn Minuten vergangen. Der Doktor stand in der Tür, er war in Hut und Mantel. „Haben Sie noch zu tun?“ Die Stenotypistin sah ihn an. Sie hatte gerade den Bogen einspannen wollen, nun stand sie auf und klappte die Maschine zu. Der Doktor schien zwar auf dem Sprung, immerhin war er da, ein Gebildeter, der am meisten geschätzte Mitarbeiter, ein Mann, dem man vertrauen durfte. Sie sagte: „Sehen Sie, so ist es immer. Gerade sonnabends, wenn man zeitig weg will. Punkt zwei fällt ihm ein, was er noch zu erledigen hat.“ Der Doktor ließ die Klinke los und kam zurück in das Zimmer. „Wenn Sie’s ihm mal höflich sagen würden?“

 

 
Elfriede Brüning (8 november 1910 – 5 augustus 2014)

 

De Ameikaanse schrijfster Margaret Mitchell werd geboren op 8 november 1900 in Atlanta, Georgia. Zie ook alle tags voor Margaret Mitchell op dit blog.

Uit: Gone with the wind

“Hunger gnawed at her empty stomach again and she said aloud: “As God is my witness, as God is my witness, the Yankees aren’t going to lick me. I’m going to live through this, and when it’s over, I’m never going to be hungry again. No, nor any of my folks. If I have to steal or kill — as God is my witness, I’m never going to be hungry again.”
In the days that followed, Tara might have been Crusoe’s desert island, so still it was, so isolated from the rest of the world. The world lay only a few miles away, but a thousand miles of tumbling waves might have stretched between Tara and Jonesboro and Fayetteville and Lovejoy, even between Tara and the neighbors’ plantations. With the old horse dead, their one mode of conveyance was gone, and there was neither time nor strength for walking the weary red miles.
Sometimes, in the days of backbreaking work, in the desperate struggle for food and the never-ceasing care of the three sick girls, Scarlett found herself straining her ears for familiar sounds — the shrill laughter of the pickaninnies in the quarters, the creaking of wagons home from the fields, the thunder of Gerald’s stallion tearing across the pasture, the crunching of carriage wheels on the drive and the gay voices of neighbors dropping in for an afternoon of gossip. But she listened in vain. The road lay still and deserted and never a cloud of red dust proclaimed the approach of visitors. Tara was an island in a sea of rolling green hills and red fields.
Somewhere was the world and families who ate and slept safely under their own roofs. Somewhere girls in thrice-turned dresses were flirting gaily and singing “When This Cruel War Is Over,” as she had done only a few weeks before. Somewhere there was a war and cannon booming and burning towns and men who rotted in hospitals amid sickening-sweet stinks. Somewhere a barefoot army in dirty homespun was marching, fighting, sleeping, hungry and weary with the weariness that comes when hope is gone. And somewhere the hills of Georgia were blue with Yankees, well-fed Yankees on sleek corn-stuffed horses.
Beyond Tara was the war and the world. But on the plantation the war and the world did not exist except as memories which must be fought back when they rushed to mind in moments of exhaustion. The world outside receded before the demands of empty and half-empty stomachs and life resolved itself into two related thoughts, food and how to get it.
Food! Food! Why did the stomach have a longer memory than the mind? Scarlett could banish heartbreak but not hunger and each morning as she lay half asleep, before memory brought back to her mind war and hunger, she curled drowsily expecting the sweet smells of bacon frying and rolls baking. And each morning she sniffed so hard to really smell the food she woke herself up.”

 

 
Margaret Mitchell (8 november 1900 – 16 augustus 1949)
Scene uit een uitvoering van de musical ‘Gone with the wind’ in Seoul, 2015

 

De Ierse schrijver Bram Stoker werd geboren op 8 november 1847 in Clontarf, een wijk van Dublin in Ierland. Zie ook alle tags voor Bram Stoker op dit blog.

Uit: Dracula

“I was told that this road is in summertime excellent, but that it had not yet been put in order after the winter snows. In this respect it is different from the general run of roads in the Carpathians, for it is an old tradition that they are not to be kept in too good order. Of old the Hospadars would not repair them, lest the Turk should think that they were preparing to bring in foreign troops, and so hasten the war which was always really at loading point.
Beyond the green swelling hills of the Mittel Land rose mighty slopes of forest up to the lofty steeps of the Carpathians themselves. Right and left of us they towered, with the afternoon sun falling full upon them and bringing out all the glorious colours of this beautiful range, deep blue and purple in the shadows of the peaks, green and brown where grass and rock mingled, and an endless perspective of jagged rock and pointed crags, till these were themselves lost in the distance, where the snowy peaks rose grandly. Here and there seemed mighty rifts in the mountains, through which, as the sun began to sink, we saw now and again the white gleam of falling water. One of my companions touched my arm as we swept round the base of a hill and opened up the lofty, snow-covered peak of a mountain, which seemed, as we wound on our serpentine way, to be right before us:–
“Look! Isten szek!”–“God’s seat!”–and he crossed himself reverently.
As we wound on our endless way, and the sun sank lower and lower behind us, the shadows of the evening began to creep round us. This was emphasised by the fact that the snowy mountain-top still held the sunset, and seemed to glow out with a delicate cool pink. Here and there we passed Cszeks and Slovaks, all in picturesque attire, but I noticed that goitre was painfully prevalent. By the roadside were many crosses, and as we swept by, my companions all crossed themselves. Here and there was a peasant man or woman kneeling before a shrine, who did not even turn round as we approached, but seemed in the self-surrender of devotion to have neither eyes nor ears for the outer world.”

 

 
Bram Stoker (8 november 1847 – 20 april 1912)
Frank Langella als Dracula in de gelijknamige film uit 1979

 

De Duitse schrijver Peter Weiss werd geboren op 8 november 1916 in Nowawes (het tegenwoordige Neubabelsberg) bij Berlijn. Zie ook alle tags voor Peter Weiss op dit blog.

Uit: Abschied von den Eltern

“Ich habe oft versucht, mich mit der Gestalt meiner Mutter und der Gestalt meines Vaters auseinanderzusetzen, peilend zwischen Aufruhr und Unterwerfung. Nie habe ich das Wesen dieser beiden Portalfiguren meines Lebens fassen und deuten können. Bei ihrem fast gleichzeitigen Tod sah ich, wie tief entfremdet ich ihnen war. Die Trauer, die mich überkam, galt nicht ihnen, denn sie kannte ich kaum, die Trauer galt dem Versäumten, das meine Kindheit und Jugend mit gähnender Leere umgeben hatte. Die Trauer galt der Erkenntnis eines gänzlich mißglückten Versuchs von Zusammenleben, in dem die Mitglieder einer Familie ein paar Jahrzehnte lang beieinander ausgeharrt hatten.
(…)

Ich verschloß meine Tür und hängte ein Tuch über das Schlüsselloch. Erst nachts war ich befreit von dem Schnüffeln draußen vor meiner Tür. Da war ich allein in der sausenden Stille eines Hohlraums, allein mit meinem Bildern und meinen beschriebenen Blättern, allein mit meinen Büchern und meiner Musik. Mit Decken dämpfte ich das Grammofon. Aus unermeßlicher Ferne kam die Musik zu mir, wie ein Traum von Befreiung. Ich stand in meiner Grotte, und meine Hände tanzten zum Takt der Musik. In meinem Blut und in den Vibrationen meiner Nerven, in meinen Pulsschlägen und Atemzügen klang die Musik. Von Tränen überströmt trankt ich die Musik, und dann ging ich zu den Geisterstimmen der Bücher, trat in die anonyme Gemeinschaft mit Sprechern, die sich ringsum in der Welt umhertasteten, diese Bücher waren geheime Botschaften, Flaschenposten, ausgeworfen, um einen Gleichgesinnten zu finden. Überall in fremden Städten, an öden Küsten, in der Verborgenheit von Wäldern, lebten diese Einzelnen, und viele sprachen aus einem Totenreich zu mir. Die Vorstellung dieser Zusammengehörigkeit tröstete mich. Es war mir, als müsse, der, dessen Buch ich jetzt las, von meiner Gegenwart wissen, und wenn ich mich dann selbst zum Schreiben niedersetzte, so wußte ich, daß andere auf mich lauschten, durch ein großes Rauschen hindurch, das uns alle umgab.”

 

 
Peter Weiss (8 november 1916 – 10 mei 1982)

 

Zie voor nog meer schrijvers van de 8e november ook mijn blog van 8 november 2015 deel 2.

Kazuo Ishiguro, Joshua Ferris, Alice Notley, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell, Detlef Opitz, Bram Stoker, Peter Weiss

De Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2009 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Kazuo Ishiguro op dit blog.

Uit: Never Let Me Go

“Sometimes he’d make me say things over and over; things I’d told him only the day before, he’d ask about like I’d never told him. ‘Did you have a sports pavilion?’ Which guardian was your special favourite?’ At first I thought this was just the drugs, but then I realised his mind was clear enough. What he wanted was not just to hear about Hailsham, but to remember Hailsham, just like it had been his own childhood. He knew he was close to com-pleting and so that’s what he was doing: getting me to describe things to him, so they’d really sink in, so that maybe during those sleepless nights, with the drugs and the pain and the exhaustion, the line would blur between what were my memories and what were his. That was when I first understood, really understood, just how lucky we’d been — Tommy, Ruth, me, all the rest of us.
Driving around the country now, I still see things that will remind me of Hailsham. I might pass the corner of a misty field, or see part of a large house in the distance as I come down the side of a valley, even a particular arrangement of poplar trees up on a hillside, and I’ll think: ‘Maybe that’s it! I’ve found it! This actually is Hailsham!’ Then I see it’s impossible and I go on driv- ing, my thoughts drifting on elsewhere. In particular, there are those pavilions. I spot them all over the country, standing on the far side of playing fields, little white prefab buildings with a row of windows unnaturally high up, tucked almost under the eaves. I think they built a whole lot like that in the fifties and sixties, which is probably when ours was put up. If I drive past one I keep looking over to it for as long as possible, and one day I’ll crash the car like that, but I keep doing it. Not long ago I was driving through an empty stretch of Worcestershire and saw one beside a cricket ground so like ours at Hailsham I actually turned the car and went back for a second look. We loved our sports pavilion, maybe because it reminded us of those sweet little cottages people always had in picture books when we were young. I can remember us back in the Juniors, pleading with guardians to hold the next lesson in the pavilion instead of the usual room. Then by the time we were in Senior 2 —when we were twelve, going on thirteen — the pavilion had become the place to hide out with your best friends when you wanted to get away from the rest of Hailsham. The pavilion was big enough to take two separate groups without them bothering each other — in the summer, a third group could hang about out on the veranda. But ideally you and your friends wanted the place just to yourselves, so there was often jockeying and arguing.“

 

 
Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

Lees verder “Kazuo Ishiguro, Joshua Ferris, Alice Notley, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell, Detlef Opitz, Bram Stoker, Peter Weiss”

Nobelprijs voor Literatuur 2017 voor Kazuo Ishiguro

Nobelprijs voor Literatuur 2017 voor Kazuo Ishiguro

De Nobelprijs voor Literatuur 2017 is toegekend aan de Engels-Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro. Dat heeft de Zweedse Academie donderdag in Stockholm bekendgemaakt. Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2009 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Kazuo Ishiguro op dit blog.

Uit: The Remains of the Day

“Strange beds have rarely agreed with me, and after only a short spell of somewhat troubled slumber, I awoke an hour or so ago. It was then still dark, and knowing I had a full day’s motoring ahead of me, I made an attempt to return to sleep. This proved futile, and when I decided eventually to rise, it was still so dark that I was obliged to turn on the electric light in order to shave at the sink in the corner. But when having finished I switched it off again, I could see early daylight at the edges of the curtains.
When I parted them just a moment ago, the light outside was still very pale and something of a mist was affecting my view of the baker’s shop and chemist’s shop opposite. Indeed, following the street further along to where it runs over the little round-backed bridge, I could see the mist rising from the river, obscuring almost entirely one of the bridge-posts. There was not a soul to be seen, and apart from a hammering noise echoing from somewhere distant, and an occasional coughing in a room to the back of the house, there is still no sound to be heard. The landlady is clearly not yet up and about, suggesting there is little chance of her serving breakfast earlier than her declared time of seven thirty.
Now, in these quiet moments as I wait for the world about to awake, I find myself going over in my mind again passages from Miss Kenton’s letter. Incidentally, I should before now have explained myself as regards my referring to ‘Miss Kenton’. ‘Miss Kenton’ is properly speaking ‘Mrs Benn’ and has been for twenty years. However, because I knew her at close quarters only during her maiden years and have not seen her once since she went to the West Country to become ‘Mrs Benn’, you will perhaps excuse my impropriety in referring to her as I knew her, and in my mind have continued to call her throughout these years. Of course, her letter has given me extra cause to continue thinking of her as ‘Miss Kenton’, since it would seem, sadly, that her marriage is finally to come to an end. The letter does not make specific the details of the matter, as one would hardly expect it to do, but Miss Kenton states unambiguously that she has now, in fact, taken the step of moving out of Mr Benn’s house in Helston and is presently lodging with an acquaintance in the nearby village of Little Compton.
It is of course tragic that her marriage is now ending in failure. At this very moment, no doubt, she is pondering with regret decisions made in the far-off past that have now left her, deep in middle age, so alone and desolate. And it is easy to see how in such a frame of mind, the thought of returning to Darlington Hall would be a great comfort to her. Admittedly, she does not at any point in her letter state explicitly her desire to return; but that is the unmistakable message conveyed by the general nuance of many of the passages, imbued as they are with a deep nostalgia for her days at Darlington Hall. Of course, Miss Kenton cannot hope by returning at this stage ever to retrieve those lost years, and it will be my first duty to impress this upon her when we meet. I will have to point out how different things are now – that the days of working with a grand staff at one’s beck and call will probably never return within our lifetime. But then Miss Kenton is an intelligent woman and she will have already realized these things. Indeed, all in all, I cannot see why the option of her returning to Darlington Hall and seeing out her working years there should not offer a very genuine consolation to a life that has come to be so dominated by a sense of waste.“

 
Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

Joshua Ferris, Kazuo Ishiguro, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell, Detlef Opitz, Bram Stoker

De Amerikaanse schrijver Joshua Ferris werd op 8 november 1974 in Danville, Illinois geboren. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Joshua Ferris op dit blog.

Uit: To Rise Again At A Decent Hour

« We call it a practice, never a business, but successful dentistry is very much a business. I started out with a windowless two-chair clinic in Chelsea. Eventually I moved into a place off Park Avenue. I had half the ground floor of an apartment complex called the Aftergood Arms. The east wing was occupied by the accounting firm of Bishop & Bishop—at that time, under investigation by a grand jury for accounting irregularities.
Park Avenue is the most civilized street in the world. Doormen still dress like it’s 1940, in caps and gloves, opening doors for old dowagers and their dogs. The awnings extend to the curb so that no one gets wet on rainy days stepping in and out of cabs, and a carpet, usually green, sometimes red, runs underfoot. With a certain cast of mind, you can almost reconstruct the horse-and-carriage days when the first of the nabob settlers were maneuvering their canes and petticoats through the Park Avenue mud. Manhattan suffers its shocks. The neighborhoods turn over. The city changes in your sleep. But Park Avenue stays Park Avenue, for better or worse—moneyed, residential, quintessentially New York.
I borrowed a lot to refurbish the new place. To pay back that money as quickly as possible, I went against the advice of the contractor, the objections of Mrs. Convoy, my own better instincts, and the general protocol of dentists everywhere and ordered a floor plan without a private office. I installed a fifth chair in that space and then spent the next ten years killing myself tending to five chairs in five rooms and bitching about my lack of privacy while raking in tons and tons of money.
Everything was always something. It did no good to bitch about it. Some days I really held a grudge. I’d tell myself to get over myself. What could be better than a thriving practice and a management structure with me on top? My days weren’t any longer than yours, except Thursdays. Some Thursdays we didn’t get out of the office until ten o’clock. I almost slept okay those nights, and the pills seemed almost redundant. (First thing to go when you medicate to sleep are the dreams. Look on the bright side, I said to myself, as my dreams first started to fade. You’re being spared, upon waking, the desperate need to convey to someone else the vivid images of a rich inner life.)”

 
Joshua Ferris (Danville, 8 november 1974)

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Joshua Ferris, Kazuo Ishiguro, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell, Detlef Opitz

De Amerikaanse schrijver Joshua Ferris werd op 8 november 1974 in Danville, Illinois geboren. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Joshua Ferris op dit blog.

Uit: The Fragments

“Here’s a question I’ve always wanted to ask. When you’re up there, are there coördinates you have to follow, or are you free to go anywhere you like?”
“Depends on where in the city you are. If you come near any of the airports, obviously—”
“Oh, sure.”
“Which you need clearance to do, anyway.”
“I’m just talking about, like, say you’re over midtown.”
“I don’t do midtown. There’s another guy does midtown.”
“I’m saying, what if you just happened to find yourself there?”
“Let me tell you,” the second man said, laughing. “You never just find yourself inside a chopper in midtown.”
He stopped eavesdropping on them when the call from Katy came in. He picked up, hoping that her deadline had been pushed back, that she’d changed her mind, that she’d be joining him after all.
“Hey,” he answered.
No reply. Static. A physical thing, a trail of it. Static heading somewhere, making progress down a hallway.
“Katy?” he said.
Static crumpling and ironing itself out. A quick vacuum silence, then more jostle. “Katy,” he said again. “Helloooo.” He stepped out of the bar, knowing by then that his wife hadn’t intended to call him. “Kaaa-teee!” he sang. Static shifting, churning, then lifting suddenly. He hollered to be heard. “Yoo-hoo, Katy!”
“… no, he thinks I’m …”
More static.
“… just wish . . . could spend the night…”
Then a man’s voice. “…too bad you live …have an extra hour…”

 
Joshua Ferris (Danville, 8 november 1974)

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Joshua Ferris, Kazuo Ishiguro, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell, Detlef Opitz

De Amerikaanse schrijver Joshua Ferris werd op 8 november 1974 in Danville, Illinois geboren. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Joshua Ferris op dit blog.

Uit: To Rise Again At A Decent Hour

“The mouth is a weird place. Not quite inside and not quite out, not skin and not organ, but something in between: dark, wet, admitting access to an interior most people would rather not contemplate—where cancer starts, where the heart is broken, where the soul might just fail to turn up.
I encouraged my patients to floss. It was hard to do some days. They should have flossed. Flossing prevents periodontal disease and can extend life up to seven years. It’s also time consuming and a general pain in the ass. That’s not the dentist talking. That’s the guy who comes home, four or five drinks in him, what a great evening, ha-has all around, and, the minute he takes up the floss, says to himself, What’s the point? In the end, the heart stops, the cells die, the neurons go dark, bacteria consumes the pancreas, flies lay their eggs, beetles chew through tendons and ligaments, the skin turns to cottage cheese, the bones dissolve, and the teeth float away with the tide. But then someone who never flossed a day in his life would come in, the picture of inconceivable self-neglect and unnecessary pain—rotted teeth, swollen gums, a live wire of infection running from enamel to nerve—and what I called hope, what I called courage, above all what I called defiance, again rose up in me, and I would go around the next day or two saying to all my patients, “You must floss, please floss, flossing makes all the difference.”
A dentist is only half the doctor he claims to be. That he’s also half mortician is the secret he keeps to himself. The ailing bits he tries to turn healthy again. The dead bits he just tries to make presentable. He bores a hole, clears the rot, fills the pit, and seals the hatch. He yanks the teeth, pours the mold, fits the fakes, and paints to match. Open cavities are the eye stones of skulls, and molars stand erect as tombstones.”

 
 Joshua Ferris (Danville, 8 november 1974)

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Kazuo Ishiguro, Joshua Ferris, Herbert Hindringer, Elfriede Brüning, Margaret Mitchell

De Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Kazuo Ishiguro op dit blog.

 

Uit: The Remains of the Day

 

“But what is the sense in forever speculating what might have happened had such and such a moment turned out differently? One could presumably drive oneself to distraction in this way. In any case, while it is all very well to talk of ’turning points’, one can surely only recognize such moments in retrospect. Naturally, when one looks back to such instances today, they may indeed take the appearance of being crucial, precious moments in one’s life; but of course, at the time, this was not the impression one had. Rather, it was as though one had available a never-ending number of days, months, years in which to sort out the vagaries of one’s relationship with Miss Kenton; an infinite number of further opportunities in which to remedy the effect of this or that misunderstanding. There was surely nothing to indicate at the time that such evidently small incidents would render whole dreams forever irredeemable.”

(…)

 

“It is sometimes said that butlers only truly exist in England. Other countries, whatever title is actually used, have only manservants. I tend to believe this is true. Continentals are unable to be butlers because they are as a breed incapable of the emotional restraint which only the English race are capable of. Continentals – and by and large the Celts, as you will no doubt agree – are as a rule unable to control themselves in moments of a strong emotion, and are thus unable to maintain a professional demeanour other than in the least
> challenging of situations. If I may return to my earlier metaphor – you will excuse my putting it so coarsely – they are like a man who will, at the slightest provocation, tear off his suit and his shirt and run about screaming. IN a word, “dignity” is beyond such persons. We English have an important advantage over foreigners in this respect and it is for this reason that when you think of a great butler, he is bound, almost by definition, to be an Englishman.”

 

 

Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

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Kazuo Ishiguro, Joshua Ferris, Detlef Opitz, Elfriede Brüning

De Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Kazuo Ishiguro op dit blog.

 

Uit: When We Were Orphans

For the first fifteen minutes or so, Osbourne moved restlessly around my drawing room, complimenting me on the premises, examining this and that, looking regularly out of the windows to exclaim at whatever was going on below. Eventually he flopped down into the sofa, and we were able to exchange news — our own and that of old schoolfriends. I remember we spent a little time discussing the activities of the workers’ unions, before embarking on a long and enjoyable debate on German philosophy, which enabled us to display to one another the intellectual prowess we each had gained at our respective universities. Then Osbourne rose and began his pacing again, pronouncing as he did so upon his various plans for the future.
“I’ve a mind to go into publishing, you know. Newspapers, magazines, that sort of thing. In fact, I fancy writing a column myself. About politics, social issues. That is, as I say, if I decide not to go into politics myself. I say, Banks, do you really have no idea what you want to do? Look, it’s all out there for us” — he indicated the window — “Surely you have some plans.”
“I suppose so,” I said, smiling. “I have one or two things in mind. I’ll let you know in good time.”
“What have you got up your sleeve? Come on, out with it! I’ll get it out of you yet!”
But I revealed nothing to him, and before long got him arguing again about philosophy or poetry or some such thing. Then around noon, Osbourne suddenly remembered a lunch appointment in Piccadilly and began to gather up his belongings. It was as he was leaving, he turned at the door, saying:
“Look, old chap, I meant to say to you. I’m going along tonight to a bash. It’s in honour of Leonard Evershott. The tycoon, you know. An uncle of mine’s giving it. Rather short notice, but I wondered if you’d care to come along. I’m quite serious. I’d been meaning to pop over to you long ago, just never got round to it. It’ll be at the Charingworth.”
When I did not reply immediately, he took a step towards me and said:
“I thought of you because I was remembering. I was remembering how you always used to quiz me about my being ‘well connected.’ Oh, come on! Don’t pretend you’ve forgotten! You used to interrogate me mercilessly. ‘Well connected? Just what does that mean, well connected?’ Well, I thought, here’s a chance for old Banks to see ‘well connected’ for himself.” Then he shook his head, as though at a memory, saying: “My goodness, you were such an odd bird at school.”

 

Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

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Kazuo Ishiguro, Elfriede Brüning, Joshua Ferris, Detlef Opitz, Zinaida Gippius

De Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2010 en eveneens alle tags voor Kazuo Ishiguro op dit blog.

 

Uit: Nocturnes

The morning I spotted Tony Gardner sitting among the tourists, spring was just arriving here in Venice. We’d completed our first full week outside in the piazza — a relief, let me tell you, after all those stuffy hours performing from the back of the cafe, getting in the way of customers wanting to use the staircase. There was quite a breeze that morning, and our brand-new marquee was flapping all around us, but we were all feeling a little bit brighter and fresher, and I guess it showed in our music.
But here I am talking like I’m a regular band member. Actually, I’m one of the ‘gypsies’, as the other musicians call us, one of the guys who move around the piazza, helping out whichever of the three cafe orchestras needs us. Mostly I play here at the Caffè Lavena, but on a busy afternoon, I might do a set with the Quadri boys, go over to the Florian, then back across the square to the Lavena. I get on fine with them all — and with the waiters too — and in any other city I’d have a regular position by now. But in this place, so obsessed with tradition and the past, everything’s upside down. Anywhere else, being a guitar player would go in a guy’s favour. But here? A guitar! The café won’t like it. Last autumn I got myself a vintage jazz model with an oval sound-hole, the kind of thing Django Reinhardt might have played, so there was no way anyone would mistake me for a rock-and-roller. That made things a little easier, but the cafe managers, they still don’t like it. The truth is, if you’re a guitarist, you can be Joe Pass, they still wouldn’t give you a regular job in thissquare.
There’s also, of course, the small matter of my not being Italian, never mind Venetian. It’s the same for that big Czech guy with the alto sax. We’re well liked, we’re needed by the other musicians, but we don’t quite fit the official bill. Just play and keep your mouth shut, that’s what the cafe managers always say. That way the tourists won’t know you’re not Italian. Wear your suit, sunglasses, keep the hair combed back, no one will know the difference, just don’t start talking.“

 

Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

Lees verder “Kazuo Ishiguro, Elfriede Brüning, Joshua Ferris, Detlef Opitz, Zinaida Gippius”

Kazuo Ishiguro, Elfriede Brüning, Detlef Opitz, Joshua Ferris, Zinaida Gippius, Peter Weiss, Martha Gellhorn, Margaret Mitchell, Bram Stoker

De Japanse schrijver Kazuo Ishiguro werd op 8 november 1954 geboren in Nagasaki. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2006 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2007 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2009.

Uit: The Unconsoled

The taxi driver seemed embarrassed to find there was no one-not even a clerk behind the reception desk-waiting to welcome me. He wandered across the deserted lobby, perhaps hoping to discover a staff member concealed behind one of the plants or armchairs. Eventually he put my suitcases down beside the elevator doors and, mumbling some excuse, took his leave of me.
The lobby was reasonably spacious, allowing several coffee tables to be spread around it with no sense of crowding. But the ceiling was low and had a definite sag, creating a slightly claustrophobic mood, and despite the sunshine outside the light was gloomy. Only near the reception desk was there a bright streak of sun on the wall, illuminating an area of dark wood panelling and a rack of magazines in German, French and English. I could see also a small silver bell on the reception desk and was about to go over to shake it when a door opened somewhere behind me and a young man in uniform appeared.
‘Good afternoon, sir,’ he said tiredly and, going behind the reception desk, began the registration procedures. Although he did mumble an apology for his absence, his manner remained for a time distinctly off-hand. As soon as I mentioned my name, however, he gave a start and straightened himself.
‘Mr Ryder, I’m so sorry I didn’t recognise you. Mr Hoffman, the manager, he was very much wanting to welcome you personally. But just now, unfortunately, he’s had to go to an important meeting.’
‘That’s perfectly all right. I’ll look forward to meeting him later on.’
The desk clerk hurried on through the registration forms, all the while muttering about how annoyed the manager would be to have missed my arrival. He twice mentioned how the preparations for ‘Thursday night’ were putting the latter under unusual pressure, keeping him away from the hotel far more than was usual. I simply nodded, unable to summon the energy to enquire into the precise nature of ‘Thursday night’.

Ishiguro

Kazuo Ishiguro (Nagasaki, 8 november 1954)

 

De Duitse schrijfster Elfriede Brüning werd geboren op 8 november 1910 in Berlijn. Na het verlaten van de middelbare school werkte ze als kantoorbediende en vanaf 1929 als secretaresse in een Berlijnse firma in de filmindustrie. In dezelfde tijd verscheen haar eerste journalistieke werk in diverse kranten. Zij werd lid van de KPD en begon tijdens de republiek van Weimar te werken voor de communistische pers. De machtsgreep van de nazi’s voorkwam in 1933 de uitgave van haar eerste, maatschappijkritische roman „Handwerk hat goldenen Boden” (hij verscheen voor het eerst in 1970 onder de titel “Kleine Leute”). Bruning richtte zich op de ontspanningsliteratuur en publiceerde in 1934 de succesvolle roman ” Und außerdem ist Sommer.” In de eerste jaren van het Derde Rijk werkte Elfriede Brüning voor het communistische verzet. Tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog verbleef ze op het landgoed van haar schoonfamilie in de buurt van Magdeburg. Zij kwam 1946 terug in Berlijn. Ze werd opnieuw lid van de KPD en werkte voor Oost-Berlijnse kranten en tijdschriften. Sinds 1950 werkte zij als freelance schrijver in Berlijn. Ze is de auteur van romans, korte verhalen, artikelen en tv-scenario’s. Elfriede Brüning ontving o.a. de Goethe-prijs van de hoofdstad van de DDR en de literaire prijs van de Demokratische Frauenbundes Deutschlands. Vandaag viert zij haar 100e verjaardag.

Uit: Kaffeefahrt ins Paradies

„Eigentlich hatte ich mir geschworen, nie mehr mitzufahren. Ich war ein gebranntes Kind.

Eine der früheren Reisen sollte uns in den frühlingshaften Spreewald bringen. Doch in dem Kaff, wo wir hielten, war im ganzen Umkreis weder ein Zipfel der Spree noch auch nur ein einziger Baum zu erspähen. Und da auch weit und breit keine Bahn oder Bus oder auch kein weiteres, etwas gemütlicheres Restaurant vorhanden war, in das man sich hätte flüchten können, blieb man in dem unwirtlichen Saal, in den man uns verfrachtet hatte, dem Werbesprecher und seinem stundenlangen Redefluß ausgeliefert, bis man sich endlich, völlig entnervt, zum Kauf einer seiner angeblich so preiswerten Lammfelldecken oder Massage- Betten entschloß, die man dann anderntags in ganz derselben Verpackung, aber um Hunderte billiger, in den Kaufhäusern liegen sah. Auch eine der so beliebten „Schnäppchen-Fahrten“ zum Polenmarkt erwies sich als Flop. Denn da unser Fahrer gehalten war, sein Gefährt auf dem diesseitigen Parkplatz abzustellen, drangen wir in das polnische Nachbarland gar nicht erst vor, weil der uns empfohlenen Fußweg über die lange Brücke nach Polen für die meisten Teilnehmer viel zu beschwerlich war. Einigen gelang es gerade noch, sich bis zu dem nahen Cafe zu schleppen, wo sie die Stunden bis zur festgesetzten Rückfahrt bei Torte und Schlagsahne hinter sich brachten. Die übrigen blieben im Bus oder „lustwandelten“, falls sie den unbezwinglichen Drang verspürten, ein wenig Luft zu schnappen, zwischen den zahlreichen Lastwagen, die den Parkplatz blockierten.

Doch diesmal würde ja alles ganz anders sein. Zu einem „Badischen Weinfest“ wurde geladen, mit Herbst-Tombola (im Februar), einem „original badischen Winzeressen“ mit Weinprobe, der Wahl einer Weinkönigin und mehreren Litern Wein „nach Ihrem Geschmack“. Zusätzlich hieß es weiter“, erhalten Sie, Frau B., das schmackhafte Winzerwurstpaket, insgesamt 2250 g feinster Delikatessen“ – alles im Fahrpreis einbegriffen. Am Nachmittag sollte der Ausflug „mit herrlicher Landschaftsfahrt“ enden.“

 brüning

Elfriede Brüning (Berlijn, 8 november 1910)

 

De Duitse schrijver Detlef Opitz werd geboren op 8 november 1956 in Steinheidel-Erlabrunn. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2009.

Uit: Klio. Ein Wirbel um L.

„(…) mehr als die nüchternen Mitteilungen der Geschichtsbücher, mehr als die spröde Arithmetik historischer Prozesse, mehr als die angereicherten Spalten in heimatlichen Blättern liebe ich die Aufzählungen in den gemeinten Opera, die langen bunten Sätze der hoffnungslos antiquierten Schreiberlings, die oftmals mehrere Seiten umfassenden, ganze Kapitel andauernden, nach irgendwelchen verrotteten Pergamenten, nach Klosterakten, unförmigen Folianten gestalteten, aus den cachotigsten Archiven zusammengeholten wortreichen Illustrationen solch nebensächlicher Dinge, wie es der Festzug war, der an Rogate des Jahres ’15 die Strassen der Stadt Halle passierte – was untertreibe ich?-, der die mit Fahnen und Emblemen, mit Girlanden und Heiligenbildern verzierten, die mit feiertäglich herausgepützeltem Volk, mit freigebigturpisen Puttanen, fidelvergnügten Krüppeln, glückseelsblöden Hungerleidern und absolut nervenden Bälgern, Bastarden, aber auch mit Würstchen, Gebäck, Met und Limonaden feilbietenden Marketendern gesäumten, die mit Teppichen und Rosenblüten, Panieren und den funkelnden Instrumentarien der Bürgerwehren geschmückten hallischen Strassen passierte (…)“

 opitz

Detlef Opitz (Steinheidel-Erlabrunn, 8 november 1956)

 

De Amerikaanse schrijver Joshua Ferris werd op 8 november 1974 in Danville, Illinois geboren. Ferris debuteerde in 2006 met de roman Zo kwamen we aan het eind. Ferris studeerde Engels en filosofie aan de universiteit van Iowa, werkte een aantal jaren in de reclamewereld, en behaalde daarna een Master of Fine Arts aan de UC Irvine.

Uit: The Unnamed

 “It was the cruelest winter. The winds were rabid off the rivers. Ice came down like poisoned darts. Four blizzards in January alone, and the snowbanks froze into gray barricades as grim and impenetrable as anything in war. Tombstones were buried across the cemetery fields and cars parked curbside were swallowed undigested. The long-term debate about changing weather was put aside for immediate concern for the elderly and the shut-ins, while the children went weeks without school. Deliveries came to a halt and the warehouses clogged up on days the planes were approved to land. There were lines at the grocery store, short tempers, a grudging toward the burden of adjustment. Some clever public services addressed the civic concerns — heat shelters, volunteer home checks. The cold was mother of invention, a vengeful mother whose lessons were delivered at the end of a lash.

The ride home was slow going because of the snow and the traffic. He usually worked by eyelet light but this evening he brought no work home and sat in one quadrant of the car without file opened or pen in hand. They were waiting for him. They didn’t know they were waiting for him. The driver had on 1010 WINS, traffic and transit on the ones. Somewhere, out to sea or in the South, it might not be snowing. Here it slanted into the windshield like white ash from a starburst. The frostbite had returned to his fingers and toes. He unbuckled the seat belt and leaned over, stretching his long torso across the backseat, and what the driver thought he didn’t care. The sound of the radio faded as one ear was sealed up by the distressed leather and he put a hand on the floor mat and ran his tingling fingertips over the fibertrapped pebbles. He hadn’t called to tell them. He had lost his phone. They were waiting for him, but they didn’t know it.

ferris

Joshua Ferris (Danville, 8 november 1974)

 

De Russische dichteres en schrijfster Zinaida Gippius werd geboren op 8 november 1869 in Beljov in de buurt van Tula. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2009.

So It Is
1918

If light is felled – I am able to see nothing,
If a man is a beast – I hate him and scorn,
If he’s worse than beasts – I kill him, laughing,
If my Russia is over – I die and I mourn.

 

She

In her despiteous and shameless wickedness
She is, as ashes, grey or grey as dust.
And I am perishing from just her nearness,
From bonds that solidly connected us.

She is a coarse one, she is a prickly one,
She is a cold one – she is a snake.
With her repulsive scales she had a cruel fun:
She makes me constantly be sternly baked.

If only I can feel a sharpness of the sting!
She is such clumsy, dull, such still as beef,
She is such massive thing, she is such languid thing;
I haven’t access to her – she’s deadly deaf.

And she inflexibly with her repulsive rings
Always caresses me and strangles at all.
And this unreal thing, this black and awful thing,
This black and monstrous thing – is just my soul!

 

Vertaald door Yevgeny Bonver

 gippius

Zinaida Gippius (8 november 1869 – 9 september 1945)
Omslag biografie

 

De Duitse schrijver Peter Weiss werd geboren op 8 november 1916 in Nowawes (het tegenwoordige Neubabelsberg) bij Berlijn. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2006 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008.

Uit: Die Ästhetik des Widerstands

Es handelte sich nicht um die Arbeit, so wie mein Vater von ihr sprach, um die Arbeit als Vorgang der Selbstverwirklichung, sondern um Arbeit geleistet zu niedrigstem Preis und zu höchstem Profit des

Arbeitkäufers. Da nur die Arbeitenden zu sehn waren, mit ihrem ganzen Dasein den Tätigkeiten hingegeben, wurde der Eindruck erweckt, dass sie das Werk beherrschten. Sie füllten, kraftvoll skulptiert vom Schein des Feuers, den Raum aus. Beim ersten Anblick, sagte mein Vater, als wir uns im Kunstmuseum befanden, stellen sie sich in der überwältigenden Dominanz von Produktivkräften dar. Und doch bestätigen sie nur bis ins letzte die Regeln der Arbeitsteilung. Es wirkt, als handelten sie selbständig, sie existieren aber einzig in ihrer Bindung an die Maschinen und Geräte, die das Eigentum andrer sind. Diese andern waren nicht zu sehn, die Arbeitenden jedoch waren ihnen

verdingt. Auch sie, die im verdreckten Winkel kauerten, eine Welle für sich, fast wie im Besitz eines eignen Lebens, warteten nur auf das Signal, das sie wieder zurückrief. Ihre Stärke entwickelten sie allein im Handwerk, und auch dort waren die Bewegungen ihrer Arme nicht bedrohlich, es war deutlich, dass sie diese ausschließlich zur Erzeugung von Gütern verwenden würden. Die Lobpreisung der Arbeit war eine Lobpreisung der Unterordnung. Die Männer, die sich von Funken umsprüht um die glühende Eisenmasse scharten, die sich am Trog wuschen, und sie, die übermüdet vor sich hinstarrend bei ihrer Mahlzeit saßen und vor denen die junge Frau mit dem verhärmten, ängstlich aufblickenden Gesicht die leeren Becher in den Korb packte, sie alle waren machtlos. Die Tiefe der Fabrik war unbestimmbar, die Reihen der senkrechten und horizontalen Eisenträger und Rohre zogen sich als Gitterwerk ins Unendliche hin. Der sich im Rauch verlierende Bau war eine Welt, aus der es kein Entrinnen gab. Besaßen wir heute auch eine Kantine, einen Waschraum, eine Umkleidekammer und konnten mit technischen Verbeßrungen rechnen, so war der Produktionsgang doch noch der selbe, wie Menzel ihn dargestellt hatte Achtzehnhundert Fünfundsiebzig, vier Jahre nach der Zerschlagung der Commune. Ihre gesammelte Energie legten die Arbeiter in die Herstellung der eisernen Blöcke, aus denen Schienen, Lafetten, Kanonenrohre wurden. Ihre Friedfertigkeit schmolzen sie um zu einer Gewalt, die sich, von weit draußen her, gegen sie, gegen ihre Interessen richten würde.“

 weiss

Peter Weiss (8 november 1916 – 10 mei 1982)

 

De Amerikaanse schrijfster en oorlogscorrespondente Martha Ellis Gellhorn werd geboren in St. Louis, Missouri op 8 november 1908. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008.

Uit: Is There a New Germany?

„Criticize, to doubt, to probe the Germans is by now not only anti-German but apparently unAmerican. In eighteen years, we have turned an astonishing emotional and intellectual somersault. Have the Germans done anything of the sort? Is there a “New Germany,” or is there simply another Germany? My acquaintance with Germany began in 1924 and continued until the end of the Nürnberg Trials, though from the summer of 1936 until American troops entered Germany during the war, I watched from a distance and listened to those who had escaped the fatherland. In these post-war years, while the United States has become officially more loving every minute toward its former enemy, I have been reading of this New Germany, and wondering. Last winter I returned to West Germany to try to find what must be New Germans, those who were children or newly born at the end of the Second World War, so young then as to be untouched by the poison their people fed on for twelve years.
I had one introduction, to a Hungarian journalist established in Germany after the Hungarian revolution of 1956. My plan was to visit universities; I meant to meet Germany’s future rulers. Hitler was a freak in German history in the sense that he was semiliterate; Germany is normally directed by university graduates, and the academic title Doctor has always abounded in German governmental circles. From the University of Hamburg, through those of Free Berlin, Frankfurt, Bonn, and Munich, I was passed along by students, either casually met or introduced by the student self-government in each university. We were strangers, they having no ideas about me and I no ideas about them. There was nothing official in this tour. I would wander into a student government office and chat with anyone I could find, and in turn they whistled up anyone they could find with spare time and a wish to talk; though I did try to meet all kinds, ranging from socialist to nationalist to don’t-know.“

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Martha Ellis Gellhorn (8 november 1908 – 16 februari 1998)

 

De Ameikaanse schrijfster Margaret Mitchell werd geboren op 8 november 1900 in Atlanta, Georgia. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2006 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008.

Uit: Gone with the wind

„She began asking questions so brusquely and giving orders so decisively Pork’s eyebrows went up in mystification. Miss Ellen didn’t never talk so short to nobody, not even when she caught them stealing pullets and watermelons. She asked again about the fields, the gardens, the stock, and her green eyes had a hard glaze which Pork had never seen in them before.
“Yas’m, dat hawse daid, layin’ dar whar Ah tie him wid his nose in de water bucket he tuhned over. No’m, de cow ain’ daid. Din’ you know? She done have a calf las’ night. Dat why she beller so.”
“A fine midwife your Prissy will make,” Scarlett remarked caustically. “She said she was bellowing because she needed milking.”
“Well’m, Prissy ain’ fixing to be no cow midwife, Miss Scarlett,” Pork said tactfully. “An’ ain’ no use quarrelin’ wid blessin’s, cause dat calf gwine ter mean a full cow an’ plen’y buttermilk fer de young Misses, lak dat Yankee doctah say dey’d need.”
“All right, go on. Any stock left?”

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Scene uit de film ‘Gone with the wind’


“No’m. Nuthin’ ‘cept one ole sow an’ her litter. Ah driv dem inter de swamp de day de Yankees come, but de Lawd knows how we gwine get dem. She mean, dat sow.”
“We’ll get them all right. You and Prissy can start right now hunting for her.”
Pork was amazed and indignant.
“Miss Scarlett, dat a fe’el han’s bizness. Ah’s allus been a house nigger.”
A small fiend with a pair of hot tweezers plucked behind Scarlett’s eyeballs.
“You two will catch the sow — or get out of here, like the field hands did.”
Tears trembled in Pork’s hurt eyes. Oh, if only Miss Ellen were here! She understood such niceties and realized the wide gap between the duties of a field hand and those of a house nigger.
“Git out, Miss Scarlett? Whar’d Ah git out to, Miss Scarlett?”
“I don’t know and I don’t care. But anyone at Tara who won’t work can go hunt up the Yankees. You can tell the others that too.”
“Yas’m.”

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Margaret Mitchell (8 november 1900 – 16 augustus 1949)

 

De Ierse schrijver Bram Stoker werd geboren op 8 november 1847 in Clontarf, een wijk van Dublin in Ierland. Zie ook mijn blog van 8 november 2006 en ook mijn blog van 8 november 2008.

Uit: Dracula

 „In the population of Transylvania there are four distinct nationalities: Saxons in the South, and mixed with them the Wallachs, who are the descendants of the Dacians; Magyars in the West, and Szekelys in the East and North. I am going among the latter, who claim to be descended from Attila and the Huns. This may be so, for when the Magyars conquered the country in the eleventh century they found the Huns settled in it.

I read that every known superstition in the world is gathered into the horseshoe of the Carpathians, as if it were the centre of some sort of imaginative whirlpool; if so my stay may be very interesting. (Mem., I must ask the Count all about them.)

I did not sleep well, though my bed was comfortable enough, for I had all sorts of queer dreams. There was a dog howling all night under my window, which may have had something to do with it; or it may have been the paprika, for I had to drink up all the water in my carafe, and was still thirsty. Towards morning I slept and was wakened by the continuous knocking at my door, so I guess I must have been sleeping soundly then.

I had for breakfast more paprika, and a sort of porridge of maize flour which they said was ‘mamaliga’, and egg-plant stuffed with forcemeat, a very excellent dish, which they call ‘impletata’. (Mem., get recipe for this also.)

I had to hurry breakfast, for the train started a little before eight, or rather it ought to have done so, for after rushing to the station at 7:30 I had to sit in the carriage for more than an hour before we began to move.

It seems to me that the further east you go the more unpunctual are the trains. What ought they to be in China?

All day long we seemed to dawdle through a country which was full of beauty of every kind. Sometimes we saw little towns or castles on the top of steep hills such as we see in old missals; sometimes we ran by rivers and streams which seemed from the wide stony margin on each side of them to be subject to great floods. It takes a lot of water, and running strong, to sweep the outside edge of a river clear.

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Bram Stoker (8 november 1847 – 20 april 1912)