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Book review: The Capital

This topical book about Eurocrats won the German Book Prize in 2917

February 25, 2019 15:32
1920px-Robert_Menasse,_2017
1 min read

The Capital By Robert Menasse (Trans: Jamie Bulloch)
MacLehose, £15

 

The Capital could hardly be more topical. Set in Brussels, the capital of the EU, it is about Eurocrats but has a Holocaust twist. It won the German Book Prize in 2017 and has sold an astonishing 400,000 copies.

One reason for this might be its wide, European range. The novel is cosmopolitan from start to finish, with characters from Greece and Turkey to Poland and Belgium. But the deeper reason for its success is the way the narrative moves cleverly between a number of central characters, EU civil servants, yes, but also police detectives (one called Maigret but no relation), doctors and Holocaust survivors.

Some officials in the EU Department of Culture have been assigned to promote the image of the EU Commission and devise a “Big Jubilee Project” event. The celebration is meant to mark the birthday of the EU Commission, to show the people of Europe that the Commission is “sexy”, that “people are glad that we exist”, and that “there is something which connects us.”

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