FrostKnopf, 2006 - 341 Visceral, raw, singular, and distinctive, "Frost" is the story of a friendship between a young man at the beginning of his medical career and a painter who is entering his final days. A writer of world stature, Thomas Bernhard combined a searing wit and an unwavering gaze into the human condition. "Frost" follows an unnamed young Austrian who accepts an unusual assignment. Rather than continue with his medical studies, he travels to a bleak mining town in the back of beyond, in order to clinically observe the aged painter, Strauch, who happens to be the brother of this young man's surgical mentor. The catch is this: Strauch must not know the young man's true occupation or the reason for his arrival. Posing as a promising law student with a love of Henry James, the young man befriends the mad artist and is caught up among an equally extraordinary cast of local characters, from his resentful landlady to the town's mining engineers. This debut novel by Thomas Bernhard, which came out in German in 1963 and is now being published in English for the first time, marks the beginning of what was one of the twentieth century's most powerful, provocative literary careers. |
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Strona 77
... forced back from their own personal darkness into a more general dark- ness , continually forced back , you understand ... Like 77.
... forced back from their own personal darkness into a more general dark- ness , continually forced back , you understand ... Like 77.
Strona 105
... forced to sleep in an attic of the inn for a while , " because the rooms were all full of soldiers . " They had ... forced to turn back because of poor visibility . As a returning veteran , he had been forced to lie low in hay barns for ...
... forced to sleep in an attic of the inn for a while , " because the rooms were all full of soldiers . " They had ... forced to turn back because of poor visibility . As a returning veteran , he had been forced to lie low in hay barns for ...
Strona 318
... forced back in on himself by his thinking , into the idea of ' never - ending snow ' ... One should be careful not to refer to such a proce- dure as ' story , ' " said the painter . " You see : I am now involved in the falling snow , in ...
... forced back in on himself by his thinking , into the idea of ' never - ending snow ' ... One should be careful not to refer to such a proce- dure as ' story , ' " said the painter . " You see : I am now involved in the falling snow , in ...
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