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parsed(2024-10-22) - pubdate: 10/24
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pub date: 1729573200
today: 1747717200, pubdate > today = false

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Eurotrash

A Novel

October 22, 2024 | Hardcover
ISBN: 9781324094562
$33.99
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Description

From "the great German-language writer of his generation" (Joshua Cohen) comes the second novel of Christian Kracht's career narrated by an eponymous "Christian" (the first was his bestselling debut, Faserland). Eurotrash begins in Zurich, where Christian has returned to care for his eighty-year-old mother after her discharge from a psychiatric institution. Confronting the dark shadows of his family's past--particularly his grandfather's strong ties with the Nazi regime--and struggling to navigate the emotionally wrenching terrain of his relationship with his mother, he sets off on a road trip with her. As they traverse Switzerland together in a hired cab, mother and son attempt to give away her vast fortune, stuffed in a large plastic bag, to random strangers. By turns disturbing, disorienting, hilarious, and poignant, and brilliantly rendered in English by prize-winning translator Daniel Bowles, Eurotrash tells an intensely personal and unsparingly critical story of contemporary culture; a story that shows us a writer at the pinnacle of his powers of insight and observation.

About this Author

Christian Kracht's books have been translated into more than thirty languages. His novel Imperium won the Wilhelm Raabe Literature Prize in 2012. He lives in Zurich with his wife and daughter.

Daniel Bowles's translation of Imperium won the Goethe-Institut's Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator's Prize in 2016. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

ISBN: 9781324094562
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Publisher: Liveright
Published: 2024-10-22

Reviews

"Eurotrash is quite simply a joy to read. Daniel Bowles has produced a glitteringly metaphorical translation, rich with delights: the mother's skin has "the texture of dry silk"; the taillights of cars during a downpour are "mirrored in the puddles, orange-red and episodic, like little wet flames." The narrator's mother is an unforgettable literary creation, and scenes in which he serves as a nurse for her potentially embarrassing health needs are quite genuinely moving. Psychogarbage or not, Eurotrash is a brilliant and unsettling reckoning with history and memory, and with the ambiguities inherent in the art of writing fiction in the first place."

"Slim, hilarious, and devastating . . . Eurotrash, which comes to us in a lithe translation by Daniel Bowles, is an absurdist, tragicomic double act. Its sensibility is steeped in Continental elegance, plunder, blood and ennui . . . Eurotrash is a cautionary tale of corrupted families in corrupted systems that churn out corrupted individuals. It is also an unremitting hoot."

"Hilariously unsettling . . . Beneath the acrid humour and the furious invective there develops a genuine tenderness in the relationship between Christian and his mother. . . . Such a fearless prose-stylist deserves an equally fearless translator, and in Daniel Bowles, Kracht has once again found a perfect partner."

"Eurotrash is a knowing book, with excursions into German history and allusions to Shakespeare, myth, and pop culture. Part of its charm is the voice of its narrator, a self-aware snob-insider who is anatomising the avarice and insecurity of the privileged class he was born into... spikily contemptuous of the opulence it depicts and narrated by a more literate and self-aware version of Kendall Roy. The translator Daniel Bowles does a great job here and throughout, rendering the prose into a vivid English that feels both idiomatic and inventive... Short but hefty, Eurotrash is a book about ageing that's steeped in a guilty knowingness about privilege, wealth and the 20th century. There's something bracing about the narrator's pained awareness that if there's such a thing as the wrong side of history, he and his family are firmly on it."

"A frolicking rumination on waning parent-child relationships and the struggles of approaching the final chapter of life."

"Some literary reputations take shape over decades; others, like Christian Kracht's arrive fully formed. Kracht has become a much surer writer in the last thirty years. He has more ideas, more voices, a more varied emotional palate at his disposal. The addition of Kracht's mother in particular, as an object of observation, interlocutor, and emotional core opens up Eurotrash. The book's most jolting and darkly amusing chapters are the early ones in which Christian recounts his family's entanglements with National Socialism. Kracht's latest, Eurotrash, out now with Liveright, ties together all of these dangling threads of his literary output--the louche, self-absorbed jet-setter, the historical fabulist, the remixer of cultural and national identity."

"Reading Christian Kracht's Eurotrash is like holding up a mirror to another mirror and admiring the infinite reflections... In this book that lies between a novel and a fictionalized history, the author presents an uncanny level of self-awareness... Though the made-up Kracht and his mother could not be described as good people, you can't help but sympathize with them in the end."

"Eurotrash is funny and cruel and full of moments that will catch you so by surprise with pathos and irony that your breath will catch in your throat. It's a novel nimbly built upon a series of delicate balances... This novel is an incredible reckoning."

"This is a provocative take on elite European culture: a large still-life of dust-lined objects, each with its own toxic history, its uses and representations; an invisible gravity measurable in language."

"Kracht (The Dead), winner of the Swiss Book Prize, turns the concept of the road trip on its head... The road trip provides the means for mother and son to relive their past, learn about each other, and exhibit affection, irritation, and anger with each other and with the world around them. The novel moves back and forth through time with hallucinogenic intensity. In this work of autofiction, Kracht deftly reveals the narrator's conflict and guilt."

"Incendiary . . . A playful tale of reconciliation that never becomes saccharine, this is one readers won't want to miss."

"Whether he's fictionalizing history in order to question the validity of history or fictionalizing himself in order to question the validity of self, it is by now apparent to me and to his many readers that Christian Kracht is the great German-language writer of his generation."

"There's a refreshing bright moral clarity to Christian Kracht's Eurotrash. Less than eighty years ago, grandpa was enslaving people to death. So when you learn that your share is 14 million Swiss Francs, how do you make it right?"

"Christian Kracht began his storied career as Germanic literature's late-capitalist enfant terrible, then somehow--stealthily, almost magically--transformed himself into its conscience. Eurotrash is Thomas Bernhard's Extinction with a sense of humor."

"Christian Kracht is a master of beautifully constructed sentences, the elegance of which conceals dread. His novels are about Germany, about ghosts, about war and delusion and every conceivable horror, but they are also full of melancholy comedy, and they all contain a hidden secret that you never quite get to the bottom of."

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