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The Tanners [Paperback]

Robert Walser (Author), Susan Bernofsky (Translator), W. G. Sebald (Introduction)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 31, 2009

"The Tanners is a contender for Funniest Book of the Year."—The Village Voice

The Tanners, Robert Walser’s amazing 1907 novel of twenty chapters, is now presented in English for the very first time, by the award-winning translator Susan Bernofsky. Three brothers and a sister comprise the Tanner family—Simon, Kaspar, Klaus, and Hedwig: their wanderings, meetings, separations, quarrels, romances, employment and lack of employment over the course of a year or two are the threads from which Walser weaves his airy, strange and brightly gorgeous fabric. “Walser’s lightness is lighter than light,” as Tom Whalen said in Bookforum: “buoyant up to and beyond belief, terrifyingly light.”

Robert Walser—admired greatly by Kafka, Musil, and Walter Benjamin—is a radiantly original author. He has been acclaimed “unforgettable, heart-rending” (J.M. Coetzee), “a bewitched genius” (Newsweek), and “a major, truly wonderful, heart-breaking writer” (Susan Sontag). Considering Walser’s “perfect and serene oddity,” Michael Hofmann in The London Review of Books remarked on the “Buster Keaton-like indomitably sad cheerfulness [that is] most hilariously disturbing.” The Los Angeles Times called him “the dreamy confectionary snowflake of German language fiction. He also might be the single most underrated writer of the 20th century....The gait of his language is quieter than a kitten’s.”

“A clairvoyant of the small” W. G. Sebald calls Robert Walser, one of his favorite writers in the world, in his acutely beautiful, personal, and long introduction, studded with his signature use of photographs.

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The Tanners + The Assistant (New Directions Paperbook) + The Microscripts
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Beneath Walser's placid, august prose lies a gnawing ambivalence about the relationship between life and art and between industry and Romanticism. Fans of W. G. Sebald will particularly enjoy Walser's contemplative prose.” (Brendan Driscoll - Booklist )

“Originally published in 1907, this is the final novel by the peerless Swiss writer to be translated into English. It's a gorgeous and strange portrait of a family's daily existence—its romances, its feuds—and comes graced with an intro by the late W. G. Sebald. The title may not refer to catching rays, but there won't be a better volume to enjoy while marinating on the beach.” (Time Out New York )

“There's a quiet dignity found in Walser's funny, stunning and enigmatic novels.” (John Goldbach - The Globe and Mail )

“It glides by like clouds escorted by sunbeams, and it leaves in its wake a series of jaw-dropping scenes.” (Scott Esposito - The Quarterly Conversation )

About the Author

Robert Walser (1878–1956) was born in Switzerland. He left school at fourteen and led a wandering and precarious existence working as a bank clerk, a butler in a castle, and an inventor's assistant while producing essays, stories, and novels. In 1933 he abandoned writing and entered a sanatorium—where he remained for the rest of his life. "I am not here to write," Walser said, "but to be mad."

Prize-winning translator Susan Bernofsky has translated numerous works by Robert Walser including The Microscripts, The Tanners, and The Assistant. She is currently at work on a biography of Robert Walser

W. G. Sebald was born in Germany in 1944 and died in 2001. He is the author of The Emigrants, The Rings of Saturn, Vertigo, Austerlitz, After Nature, On the Natural History of Destruction, Unrecounted and Campo Santo.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 360 pages
  • Publisher: New Directions; 1 edition (August 31, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 081121589X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0811215893
  • Product Dimensions: 7.1 x 5.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #318,422 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Robert Walser (1878-1956) worked as a bank clerk, a butler in a castle, and an inventor's assistant before discovering what William H. Gass calls his "true profession." From 1899 until he was misdiagnosed as a schizophrenic in 1933 and institutionalized for the rest of his life, Walser produced nine novels and more than a thousand stories.

 

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Saving the Best for Last., November 19, 2009
This review is from: The Tanners (Paperback)
The Tanners, Walser's first published novel, is perhaps the most immediately inviting -- and yet we have had to wait a century for this translation. This is the last of Walser's novels to be translated, which leads one to think it must be the bottom of the barrel somehow, like the last of Hemingway. But no, no, not at all! It's as lovely as anything Walser wrote. I can't believe my good fortune, finding this now, after re-reading the NYRB Walser Selected Stories so many times it may qualify as a personal tic.

The Tanners is the story of five siblings and focuses on Simon, who explains, "I am the youngest and the one who occasions the fewest hopes." Like every Walser protagonist, he wanders around dreaming, walking, losing jobs, renting rooms, and praising women without actually getting involved with them. He moves from misfortune to misfortune, and praises them all.

The translation, by Susan Bernofsky, reads beautifully. Masquerade, her translation of a selection of Walser's stories, is also vivid and playful and dextrous. May she translate more!

This book is full of all the strange things only Walser can do -- the peculiar storm light of mania, the special cheerfulness of extremely depressed people, the vast detached love of which they are capable. Magic is spun from the most pedestrian adjectives. So much that is dreamy, disappointing, unfathomable -- it's so nearly weightless and at the same time succeeds in catching so many extraordinary moments and feelings.

There's something so exhilarating about Walser's protagonist, an eternal zero, who never succeeds at anything -- but also never seems to fail in any way that matters. (I love the way people fail in this novel. Money is lost, wives are abandoned, people freeze to death in the forest -- but no one ever seems to mind.) It's exhilarating to read about someone who isn't interested in success, power, importance, travel or sexual conquest -- I feel myself in the presence of a man who has stumbled upon real life.


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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Bearable Lightness of Being Robert Walser, October 9, 2009
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Nobody has ever written a more light-hearted account of anxiety and anomie than Robert Walser. "Light-headed" might also describe Walser's literary personality.. light-headed in the sense of 'giddy' that is.. as well as Walser the man, whose head clearly floated lightly on his shoulders. In case you've never heard of him, Walser was born in Switzerland in 1878, one child in a large and eccentric family. He led an unsteady and flighty sort of life, working here and there as a butler, a bank clerk, a shop assistant, etc. and writing nine novels and hundreds of stories. He was 'known' to and influential on other German writers, including Kafka, but scarcely a literary success. He spent some stays in mental institutions, finally being committed permanently in 1933. He remained institutionalized (and sadly unable to write) until his death in 1956. This novel "The Tanners" is a thinly fictionalized portrayal of his early life. It's not about a bunch of leather workers; "Tanner" is the family name of five siblings, whose lives carom off each other without truly melding over the course of two years of meandering. The title in German - Die Geschwister Tanner - literally means 'The Tanner Siblings'. Simon Tanner, the central character, is unquestionably, Robert Walser's self-portrait. It's as powerful a revelation of the artist's interior being as any of Vincent van Gogh's self-portraits.

Walser flitted through life and through the sentences of his writing as lightly as a dragonfly, and yet his writing never seems aimless or parenthetical. It's "one thing after another" and yet it never seems aimless or shapeless. Some of his best stories and some of the most enticing chapters of 'The Tanners' are simply accounts of long walks, during which the 'narrator' observes, absorbs, abandons whatever he encounters next. It seems almost as random as 'real life', but don't be deceived! Walser is not just a note-taker of life; his literary walks draw upon his actual walks, but they are subtle shaped and edited. The man Walser never had the vaguest idea where he was walking to, but the writer Walser prepared his itinerary artfully.

Walser was unpublishable in the Germany of the Third Reich - a 'decadent' to that crowd - and all but forgotten until the 1970s. But there seems to be a rising tide floating his reputation these days, both in Germany and the Anglophone world. One factor may be the concurrently rising fame of W.G. Sebald, the German author who spent much of his life in England. Sebald (1944-2001) wrote a reminiscence of Walser, translated as the introduction to this English edition of The Tanners, in which he acknowledges the influence Walser had on his own work. It's characteristic Sebald, complete with odd peripheral photographs, and it's also utterly Walserian.

Reading Walser, I often find myself wondering, "Wait a moment... where was I just now? I know I was thrilled to be there, but..." It's that lightness of being. Surely someone whose short-term memory is destroyed by a concussion must experience life as a Walser novel, but that someone would need to be ineffably light-hearted. There's no evidence that Walser was autistic -- in fact, he couldn't have been, in any standard diagnosis -- but there is a kind of autism in his writing, a subtle sense that the characters don't respond to the social clues and signals in any normal manner. Right in the middle of The Tanners, for instance, while Simon Tanner is walking overnight across a winter-bound mountain, he comes upon a frozen corpse. The dead man is a young poet friend of Simon's sister, a character of even more fragile eccentricity than Simon himself. But Simon isn't horrified. Not at all! Instead he marvels at the poetic aptness of such a death, and wishes he had flowers to strew on the corpse. Walser's usually simple prose ascends to rare ecstatic beauty in this scene.

This translation by Susan Bernofsky is extraordinarily close in affect to the original. Dare I say, as good as the original? I've had the German text for some years; it's available now on amazon USA. There are some loopy Swiss-German touches in it, which don't survive translation, but otherwise the reader will meet the same light-stepping Walser in English as auf Deutsch. Perhaps I should be peremptory: Robert Walser was one of the greatest writers of the 20th Century, in German or any other language. You NEED to read him.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Unique, September 11, 2010
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This review is from: The Tanners (Paperback)
Within the first few pages of 'The Tanners', there is a wonderfully clever description of the oldest, and most worry-laden, of the Tanner siblings, Klaus: 'He was one of those people who feel so compelled to fulfill duties that they go plunging into great collapsing edifices constructed entirely of disagreeable duties simply out of the fear that some secret, inconspicuous duty might somehow elude them'. These lines come book-ended around the reader's introduction to the main character, the youngest of the Tanners, Simon - first with his bizarre, brazen appeal for employment and then his equally impertinent criticism of his employer as he walks off the job a month later. Taken together, it would seem that, initially at least, Walser's style is trending in a certain direction, one that is reminiscent of more contemporary novels - absurdist situations coupled with dry humor and nimble observations - and curiously self-aware for a product of 1907.

But beginning with the following chapter and on through the rest of the book, Walser nearly abandons this style. Instead, he unhitches his narrative from conventional techniques and is content to pursue any diversionary notion or thought his characters might have - from spending pages dreamily considering the emotional resonance of a forest, or fantasizing about platonic love, or the advantages of country life, or even the sights, sounds and characters of a public eating house. In fact, there really is no 'getting on with it' for the entire book - substantially, these wandering notes, this accumulation of detail that defines Walser's characters more by outline than by direct examination *is* the entire point. The trajectory of its characters is irrelevant, subplots begin and go nowhere, and, much like in reality, everyone is essentially the same in the end as they were at the start.

Walser, in 'The Tanners', reminds me quite a bit of Hungarian author Gyula Krudy's Sunflower, although that reference is too obscure to be much help. Those readers who are familiar with W. G. Sebald will probably recognize Walser's influence on that writer, even without the help of Sebald's sterling essay on Walser included here as an introduction. But Jed Lipinski's brief review in the Village Voice which simultaneously compares Walser to Kafka and nominates 'The Tanners' as "contender for Funniest Book of the Year" makes me wonder what book he read in its place. Perhaps if he'd had more than a paragraph in which to review the book, he could adequately defend both of those statements, but I would direct any reader interested in Robert Walser to look *anywhere* else for guidance. Walser's qualities are certainly unique - nearly sui generis - and I wouldn't hesitate to recommend his work for those looking for something different, but it seems to me that it serves no one well to present this work as something it's not.

Going strictly by the taglines accompanying each star rating, I probably should have rated 'The Tanners' two stars, as I found it overlong and difficult to finish. But Walser's singularity is still interesting in and of itself, and I'd like to try more of his works - especially his short stories, since I think that venue might showcase Walser's qualities in the best light. Additionally, W. G. Sebald's introductory essay, 'Le Promeneur Solitaire' (from a forthcoming collection entitled 'A Place in the Country') is excellent, as usual, and since it deals with Walser's work as a whole, it makes me want to try more before giving up. This one will surely not be every reader's cup of tea, but may be perfect for those listening for a unique voice.

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