An approach from many angles
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When W G Sebald died in a car accident in 2001, after publishing just four books, his readers felt both a huge sense of loss, and also a sense of irony, that such a melancholic, perceptive writer should have come to an end quite so synchronistic with his writings. It seemed so appropriate that his disjointed, somehow incomplete literary wanderings should come to an abrupt end, leaving so many questions hanging in the wind. All great works of literature either found a genre or dissolve one (Walter Benjamin, quoted in the book under review), and Sebald's books are quite unique, baring a resemblance to nothing which has gone before, and almost certainly being followed by no book quite like them. Sebald creates thoughts in us which are entirely our own, as though discovering something which has always been there, but unrecognised until the convoluted prose of Sebald has penetrated into out own depths to release something precious from its swirling eddies.
For those who still hunger after more Sebald, this book fits the bill very well. A collection of essays and interviews with Sebald, it fills in many gaps, offering assistance to those who ask the questions:
- Are these novels or reflective travelogues?
- Are the characters Sebald meets real or imagined (or perhaps composite)?
- Who is the narrator?
- What is the meaning of the photographs?
- Are the photographs genuine illustrations of the events in the books?
- What is the relationship of the books to the Holocaust?
Sebald gave several in-depth interviews, the transcriptions of which are included in this book, and he seemed quite happy to talk about his work, its meaning and its influences. It also includes material on the political background to his works, the "collective amnesia" of Germany after World War II, and also the controversy Sebald stirred up when writing and talking about the allied bombing campaigns over German cities. In this book you will read much about his personal philosophy and motivations and this helps the reader understand the works themselves. Some of the essays show us that Sebald was not "perfect" but also had his flaws and it is helpful to see these in the broader context provided.
Sebald is above all, a writer who initiates a creative process within the reader, such that the book becomes something personal, with an interpretation unique to himself. Many people find that when finishing a Sebald book, they have a great inclination to go back to the beginning and start again. Certainly the books get read and re-read, and have a special space on the bookshelf where others get lost among the crowd of other volumes. This book is a highly useful addition to literature about Sebald and for those who would really rather have a new novel by Sebald himself, it is not a bad second-best.
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