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The Book of Franza & Requiem for Fanny Goldmann [Hardcover]

Ingeborg Bachmann (Author), Peter Filkins (Translator)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Perhaps it's something in the air, or an ironic additive found exclusively in the Danube, but Central Europe seems to breed a certain kind of mordant and malicious stylist. From Joseph Roth to Robert Musil to Thomas Bernhard, there's a tendency to go straight for society's jugular--without, however, relinquishing an iota of humor. And Ingeborg Bachmann, who perished in a fire in 1973, surely fits into this lineage. A poet, librettist, essayist, and fiction writer, she made postwar Austria the object of her skeptical scrutiny. She saw a nation with blood on its hands and corruption in its heart, not to mention an ongoing gender war between Mann and Madchen. And nowhere did she address these conditions with more passion and penetrating wit than in The Book of Franza & Requiem for Fanny Goldmann.

Neither work was quite finished at the time of Bachmann's death. But in both cases, translator Peter Filkins has assembled manuscripts and variants into a coherent whole, and turned the author's high-density prose into eminently readable English. The Book of Franza represents a pitched battle between the sexes--or more particularly, between the eponymous heroine and her manipulative psychiatrist of a husband. How could she have overlooked debris of Dr. Leopold Jordan's previous marriages?

Only now do I wonder about the other women and why all of them disappeared without a sound, why one no longer left the house, why another turned on the gas, while I myself am the third who amended herself with this name, becoming the third Frau Jordan.... Yet I hung myself with my immature thinking, with my careless rapture for his charged wire of thought, for had I touched a high-voltage wire, causing electrocution, severe damage, and burns, it would have been faster and gentler, and certainly no worse.
The novella-length Requiem for Fanny Goldmann transposes the same concerns--silence and sex, language and corruption--into a lighter key, with a more satiric touch. But here, too, the heroine is seduced and abandoned. And again the accumulation of bad faith and broken promises seems like a national rather then merely personal affliction. Even Fanny's fading looks are made to sound like a defeat for the body politic: "During this night something happened to her beautiful Goldmann shoulders. They had fallen like the front line of an army laid low by the enemy, and there was no one who could say who this enemy was, by what means he advanced, and what he was planning." Early and late, Bachmann seemed always to survey a defeated world. But her work remained adamantly alive to the end, which is just the sort of victory that every writer (and every reader) desires. --Ingrid Broun

From Publishers Weekly

When Austrian-born Bachmann died in 1973 after a fire destroyed her Rome apartment, Germanic literature lost an important female literary voice at the height of its powers. Her predecessors were Robert Musil and Elias Canetti, but she infused their melancholy and Viennese-centered cultural criticism with a proto-feminist slant. She is known in the U.S. mainly for her novel, Malina, which was part of a projected series, Ways of Dying. This volume presents the fragments of two other novels in that series. "Book of Franza," the more substantial fragment, traces the complex relationship between Martin Ranner and his sister, whom he dubbed Franza in childhood. Orphaned in WWII, they grow up in the countryside in Galicia. Then Franza goes to Vienna, becomes a model and falls into the clutches of a sadistic psychoanalyst, Leo Jordan, whom she marries. Martin is planning on a trip to Egypt when his sister suddenly appears, having escaped from Jordan's "treatment," and pleads to join him. Franza's illness worsens on the trip, as though the mental and emotional abuse she suffered is literally killing her. Her travels through Egypt confirm, for her, the vast history of the suppression of women. In the second, sketchy tale, the famous specter of Malina returns, and there are hints that Martin Ranner is a creation of Malina's imagination. Fanny Goldmann, n?e Wishnewski, is a Viennese actress and the leading beauty for a season. Her great rival is Malina's sister, Maria Malina. Bachmann tackles themes of ambition, female rivalry and women's social and financial dependence on men, sketching in bold strokes and raw prose. This translation, augmented by supplementary notes and a chronology, will make available to English readers texts reaffirming Bachmann's place as a fiercely clairvoyant writer. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 233 pages
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press; 1 edition (October 25, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0810112043
  • ISBN-13: 978-0810112049
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,243,143 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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