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The Yellow Sailor
 
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The Yellow Sailor [Hardcover]

Steve Weiner (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

September 6, 2001
Steve Weiner's debut novel, The Museum of Love, was met with extraordinary praise that called up comparisons to "the delirious raw immediacy of the novels of Céline, Burroughs, and Genet and the cinematic disjunctions of Kronenberg and Lynch." (Los Angeles Times Book Review)

His extraordinary new novel, moodily operatic in tone and by turns hallucinatory and brilliantly detailed, follows the trajectories of four sailors and the owner of a German merchant ship, Yellow Sailor, which sets sail from Bremen in 1914. After the ship wrecks in shallow water, the men drift their separate ways, with each man's journey across a desolate wartime European landscape becoming an exploration of the failure of love, sex, religion, and friendship. Julius Bernai, owner of the ship and frankly homosexual, checks into an institute for nervous disorders and falls in love with the doctor's fiancée. Nicholas Bremml drifts: from the beds of numerous prostitutes to an oil tanker called Erwartung— Expectation—to Prague's Jewish market, where he sells magic spells. Brothers Karl and Alois are equally rudderless, and Jacek, the electrician, goes to work in the mines, where his love advice to a fourteen year old Polish boy precipitates a macabre murder.

Elegantly grotesque and baroquely compelling, The Yellow Sailor is a chiaroscuroed search for love, dimly and briefly lit by flashes of hope, until gorgeous hallucinations beckoning with a seductive nothingness overwhelm the bleak and tentative future.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Several German sailors wander through Europe after a shipwreck in Weiner's murky, surreal second novel (after Museum of Love), set at the beginning of WWI. The novel opens with the demise of the Yellow Sailor, a merchant ship from Bremen that runs aground in shallow water on the East Prussian coast, leaving the protagonists lost and adrift in the war-torn landscape. The primary focus falls on Nicholas Bremml, a moody 19-year-old with a sardonic, romantic streak. He drifts from woman to woman and falls in love with a prostitute while working on an oil tanker, then ends up selling magic charms on the Jewish black market before enlisting in a Czech regiment. The fate of Julius Bernai, the shady, gay owner of the ship, is no less checkered. He exploits his power over the local soldiers to maintain his position until he finally has a nervous breakdown and falls in love with a doctor's fianc‚e. Several other crewmen have similar problems rebuilding their fractured lives, most notably the ship's electrician, who becomes involved in a bizarre murder. Most of the novel follows their meanderings as they try to make sense of the grotesque parody of normal life in which they find themselves adrift, with Weiner tending toward the dreamlike and macabre in his imagery and scene construction. He pelts readers with short, staccato sentences throughout: "They had a schnapps. It was time to go. Sedez dressed. Sedez bowed. Sedez left." Many passages offer striking visuals and decadent plot twists, but there are also plenty of scenes that fail to rise above the level of vivid sketches. Bremml's disconnected story is the closest Weiner comes to a coherent subplot, and despite the potential offered by the setting and the period, some readers may find themselves bewildered by the lack of narrative coherence.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Steve Weiner was born in Wisconsin, studied writing at the University of California and went on to study film animation. His first novel, The Museum of Love, was published in eight countries to wide acclaim and shortlisted for Canada's prestigious Giller Prize.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Overlook Hardcover (September 6, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 158567169X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585671694
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,970,864 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars bizarre vignettes in a strange european landscape, April 3, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Yellow Sailor (Paperback)
This is a series of bizarre vignettes set in a bleak, hopeless central European landscape in the time of war. The sailors drift away from their wrecked ship like so many splinters, each encountering sadness and heartbreak. Weiner's writing style is clipped and colourful. He paints vivid images with a few words. Only three stars because there is no single character to sympathize with in this story. Each man floats through the scenes, performing disturbing acts and reciting strange dialogue. It is very fantastical, but ultimately unfulfilling. Thankfully, it was a quick read and the author didn't try to turn it into a 500 page epic.
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