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Loading... Sweet Days of Discipline (original 1989; edition 2018)by Fleur Jaeggy (Author)
Work InformationSweet Days of Discipline by Fleur Jaeggy (1989)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Prose like cut-glass in an almost plotless tale of schoolgirl obsession. "Her looks were those of an idol, disdainful. Perhaps that was why I wanted to conquer her....The first thing I thought was she had been further than I had." I found it another of those oddly compelling novels I'm drawn to (like Pond) where not much happens but the writing sweeps you along. ( ) a strange, cold book that seems to borrow a lot from Duras' self-conscious literariness. it has beautiful turns of phrase and is quite moving in its evocation of underloved rich boarding school girls with their undeclared queerness, but i found the casual racism toward "the black girl" unpalatable and the novel was slight, i am not sure it'll linger with me. For starters: let it be clear that the title of this booklet (In English “Sweet days of Discipline”) is meant to be sarcastic. A woman looks back on her childhood, which she spent in different boarding schools in Switserland, a chilling story of suppressed feelings, coldness and gloom. On the surface, this seems like a rather classic coming-of-age novel, with all the usual ingredients of the stifling, over-disciplined life at a boarding school in Switzerland in the 1950s. But the reference, at the very beginning to Robert Walser is not an innocent link. That Swiss writer was the master of stories in which apparently nothing much happens, but which are imbued with the gravity and chillness of life, written in accurate, almost merciless prose. And that is also the case with Jaeggy. For instance, the absent mother (who conducts her daughter's life from Brazil), and the cold, distant father who lives in hotel rooms, make clear that the unnamed narrative voice has been more or less left to her own fate. She seeks rapprochement with two other girls, one mysterious and detached, the other exuberantly extravert, with a suppressed sexual undertone, but that also not leads to much. There is a veil of gloom over the entire story, which also regularly contains references to death. Again, as with Walser, not much is happening, but it is mainly the intense, sombre atmosphere that makes this short booklet stand out; you cannot put your finger on it, but this story sticks, that’s for certain. 3.5 stars. A compact and eerie account of a girl's boarding school experiences and relationships. Sweet Days of Disclipline is an atmospheric character sketch that works nicely because Jaeggy's writing, in Tim Parks's translation, is so concise. (There's more on my blog here.) no reviews | add a review
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LGBTQIA+ (Fiction.)
HTML: On the heels of I Am the Brother of XX and These Possible Lives, here is Jaeggy's fabulously witchy first book in English, with a new Peter Mendelsund cover A novel about obsessive love and madness set in postwar Switzerland, Fleur Jaeggy's eerily beautiful novel begins innocently enough: "At fourteen I was a boarder in a school in the Appenzell." But there is nothing innocent here. With the off-handed remorselessness of a young Eve, the narrator describes her potentially lethal designs to win the affections of Fréderique, the apparently perfect new girl. In Tim Parks' consummate translation (with its "spare, haunting quality of a prose poem," TLS), Sweet Days of Discipline is a peerless, terrifying, and gorgeous worNo library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)853.914Literature Italian and related languages Italian fiction 1900- 20th Century 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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