Dark Company: A Novel in Ten Rainy Nights

by Gert Loschütz

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 "Of course I had to end up here . . ."   Over ten rainy nights, Thomas, an ex-bargeman who used to be skipper of his own boat, walks the muddy fields of the landlocked German interior and remembers the events that lost him his home, his boat, and his livelihood: his apprenticeship in the cold halls of the Royal Naval College in London; the dangers of the mean streets and waterfront of New York in the 1970s, and Poland under martial law; Germany after the reunification, when for a year or show more so it seemed that the whole country drifted rudderless, drawn by the current of history to who knows where. In this novel from Gert Loschütz,Thomas remembers childhood, his first love, and the warnings of his grandfather: Beware the dark company! This mysterious band of men and women dressed in black cast a shadow over his story, as he wrestles with the secrets, the unplumbed depths of his soul, the hazards lurking below a seemingly placid surface, and throughout it all, the rain, falling night after night.   Dark Company is a superb example of a distinctly German tradition in weird fiction which claims its roots in Kafka and Herbert Rosendorfer. show less

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bluepiano Main characters in both are former captains who no longer can work aboard a ship, though both long to return to sea/the rivers Hanley's undeservedly obscure novel is a study of desperation and deterioration; Loschutz's is atmospheric and ambiguous.

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1 review
This is a very good book indeed, perhaps an outstandingly good one but to be fair my opinion of the novel may be coloured by its being exactly my cup of tea: The language is simple, unadorned, the atmosphere is overwhelming, the uncanny elements are incidental and understated, neither pondered nor explained. The characters are simply that, characters, without distinct personalities and each chapter is simply an episode, not a building block in a plot. Indeed, conventional characters and plot would have been jarring in a book of quietly strange experiences befalling a wanderer who views unfamiliar places and people through a veil of ceaseless rain. People disappear, reappear, issue incomprehensible warnings and utter strange statements show more that the narrator try as he may cannot understand. Dark Company isn't though weird fiction nor is it remotely like Kafka despite the publisher's description; it's too subtle, too misty to resemble either. The only description that occurs to me is that it's a haunting literary novel whose disquieting eeriness is born from the mundane and suggests the ineffable. show less

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17+ Works 112 Members

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Willcocks, Samuel (Translator)

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Canonical title
Dark Company: A Novel in Ten Rainy Nights
Original title
Dunkle Gesellschaft
Original language
German

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
833.92Literature & rhetoricGerman & related literaturesGerman fiction1900-1990-
LCC
PT2672 .O84 .D86Language and LiteratureGerman, Dutch and Scandinavian literaturesGerman literatureIndividual authors or works1961-2000
BISAC

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Members
32
Popularity
876,638
Reviews
1
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4
ASINs
1