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The Parable of the Blind - SAVE 50%!

The Parable of the Blind - SAVE 50%!

by Gert Hofmann
Translated by Christopher Middleton
Afterword by Michael Hofmann

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Product Details

Verba Mundi

Softcover
ISBN: 978-1-56792-563-0
Pages: 152
Size: 5.5" x 8.5"
Published: January 2017
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A high-water mark of postwar German literature, a profoundly skeptical meditation on the fragility of human communities and the pitfalls and contradictions of making art.

A knocking on the barn door drags us out of our sleep. No, the knocking isn’t inside us, it’s outside, where the other people are. Six blind beggars—ragged, profane, irascible—find themselves waking to yet another grim day in the dark. Today, however, something is different. Today these men have an appointment with a painter: they have been hired as models, to pose for Pieter Bruegel’s grotesque masterpiece-in-the-making.

With tremendous verbal ingenuity and black humor, Gert Hofmann’s novel follows this tattered sextet’s shambling progress across a landscape in 16th century Flanders, peopled by half-heard voices and unseen dangers, towards their ultimate encounter with the great, capricious artist, and (perhaps) their own immortality.

One of the great novelists of the second half of the twentieth century. —Gabriel Josipvici, TLS
The most singular writer to come out of Germany since Heinreich Böll. —The Times [London]
One of Germany's most respected postwar authors. —Publishers Weekly
"Parable" offers sly, striking contemporary commentary on the precariousness of language and facts, and, in particular, on the need to negotiate unstable ground—literally, but also socially and politically—afresh each day. —The New Yorker
Gert Hofmann
Gert Hofmann was a prolific German writer of both novels and radio-plays. In the 1980s, he won prizes such as the Prix Italia and the Doblin prize. He is most well known for examining mortality and the resonances of Nazism in postwar Germany. His 1985 novel, Der Blindensturz was translated into English by Christopher Middleton in 1989, and retitled The Parable of the Blind.

Christopher Middleton
Christopher Middleton was a British poet, professor, and translator. He specialized in Germanic languages and literature, and was a professor at the University of Texas from 1966 to 1998. He has translated works from many German authors, including Nietzsche, Hölderlin, and Hoffman, and has been awarded the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, as well as the Schlegel-Tieck prize for translation.

Author: Michael Hofmann

Michael Hofmann, the son of Gert Hofmann, was born in Freiburg, West Germany, in 1957. He is the author of four books of poems, Nights in the Iron Hotel, Acrimony, Corona, Corona, and Approximately Nowhere, and two collections of essays, Behind the Lines and Where Have You Been?, as well as numerous translations from German, including works by Joseph Roth, Peter Stamm, Gottfried Benn, Franz Kafka, and Hans Fallada. His Selected Poems were published in 2008.