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Absence by Peter Handke — book cover

Absence

by Peter Handke, Ralph Manheim
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Overview

The time is an unspecified modernity, the place possibly Europe. Absence follows four nameless people — the old man, the woman, the soldier, and the gambler — as they journey to a desolate wasteland beyond the limits of an unnamed city.

Synopsis

The time is an unspecified modernity, the place possibly Europe. Absence follows four nameless people — the old man, the woman, the soldier, and the gambler — as they journey to a desolate wasteland beyond the limits of an unnamed city.

Publishers Weekly

German author Handke ( Afternoon of a Writer ) enlarges the recurrent metaphysical preoccupations of his prolific output in this latest challenging and rewarding novel. The story's four nameless protagonists meander through a surreally disconnected and flattened landscape. An old artist, a gambler ignorant of himself, a callow soldier whose self-effacing ``absence'' is a defense against the world, and a vain woman whose frantic mirror-staring fails to make her present to herself, ``roam''--as the novel's epigraph from Chuang Tzusp ok puts it--``in the palace of Nowhere, where all things are one.'' As they wander across an almost featureless northern plain, the past, present and future become one and the characters' insubstantial identities collapse into one another. But when they detect legible symbols in the surrounding blankness and read them with conviction, the landscape springs into recognizable life and the characters discover their strength. In this smoothly written fable, Handke forcefully summons readers to the recognition that the essence of human life lies in the striving for self-expression even though its perfect realization must always remain elusive. (May)

About the Author, Peter Handke

Peter Handke was born in Griffen, Austria, in 1942. He is the author of books, plays and screenplays, including the novel Crossing the Sierra de Gredos (FSG, 2007) and the nonfiction work Don Juan - His Own Version (FSG, 2010).

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

German author Handke ( Afternoon of a Writer ) enlarges the recurrent metaphysical preoccupations of his prolific output in this latest challenging and rewarding novel. The story's four nameless protagonists meander through a surreally disconnected and flattened landscape. An old artist, a gambler ignorant of himself, a callow soldier whose self-effacing ``absence'' is a defense against the world, and a vain woman whose frantic mirror-staring fails to make her present to herself, ``roam''--as the novel's epigraph from Chuang Tzusp ok puts it--``in the palace of Nowhere, where all things are one.'' As they wander across an almost featureless northern plain, the past, present and future become one and the characters' insubstantial identities collapse into one another. But when they detect legible symbols in the surrounding blankness and read them with conviction, the landscape springs into recognizable life and the characters discover their strength. In this smoothly written fable, Handke forcefully summons readers to the recognition that the essence of human life lies in the striving for self-expression even though its perfect realization must always remain elusive. (May)

Library Journal

Four characters, identified only as the Old Man, the Woman, the Soldier, and the Gambler, travel to a remote wasteland bordering on an unnamed city. Seasons change overnight, the old man disappears, and the notebook he carries appears to the soldier in a dream, but despite evocative prose there's little direction here, only curious moments and a vague unease. Handke expects his readers to swallow each descriptive detail in this interminable journey, whether it deserves curiosity--or has any significance--or not. In his last novella (at just over 100 pages we should not overrate these slim volumes), the protagonist's experiences shed some light on the book's title ( Afternoon of A Writer, LJ 9/1/89). Absence , alas, is completely true to its title.-- Peter Bricklebank, City Coll., CUNY

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2000
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Pages
118
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780374527631

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