Lyric Novella (The Seagull Library of German Literature) (Paperback)

Lyric Novella (The Seagull Library of German Literature) By Annemarie Schwarzenbach, Lucy Renner Jones (Translated by), Lucy Jones (Translated by) Cover Image

Lyric Novella (The Seagull Library of German Literature) (Paperback)

By Annemarie Schwarzenbach, Lucy Renner Jones (Translated by), Lucy Jones (Translated by)

$12.50


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Schwarzenbach’s clear, psychologically acute prose makes this novella an evocative narrative, with many intriguing parallels to her own life.

Annemarie Schwarzenbach—journalist, novelist, antifascist, archaeologist, and traveler—has become a European cult figure for bohemian free spirits since the rediscovery of her works in the late 1980s. Lyric Novella is her story of a young man’s obsession with a Berlin variété actress. Despite having his future career mapped out for him in the diplomatic service, the young man begins to question all his family values under Sibylle’s spell. His family, future, and social standing become irrelevant when set against his overriding compulsion to pick her up every night from the theater so they can go for a drive. Bringing the story back to her own life, Schwarzenbach admitted after publication that her hero was in fact a young woman, not a man, leaving little doubt that Lyric Novella is a literary tale of lesbian love during socially and politically turbulent times.

Lucy Jones is a cofounder of Transfiction GbR and a translator of works from German.

Product Details ISBN: 9781803090375
ISBN-10: 1803090375
Publisher: Seagull Books
Publication Date: August 5th, 2022
Pages: 138
Series: The Seagull Library of German Literature
“The subject of Annemarie Schwarzenbach’s story is not failed love— Sibylle’s apparent emotional coldness—but the failure of love—the protagonist’s helpless inability, in the crucial moment, to accept his human responsibility toward the beloved.”
— Neue Zürcher Zeitung

“The work bears the face of its time, but it is so gentle, silent and veiled that one can barely exclude the person behind the mask. A mask is in fact this face, because the hero is a heroine who does not want to be seen.”
— Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung