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Visitation: It's all on the house

October 28, 2010 11:18

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

By Jenny Erpenbeck
Portobello, £10.99

History happens to people, but it leaves its mark most of all on places — such appears to be the view of German novelist, Jenny Erpenbeck. Her unsettling, quirky new novel offers a study of East Germany from the perspective of a lakeside house.

The property, a sprawling, gothic maze, bears witness to the horrors — and triumphs — of a century. Unsurprisingly, it is touched by the Holocaust and the repression of the Soviet era, but it also quietly heeds events of smaller significance; falling in love, a friendship formed over a summer.

Visitation is not one story but a dozen, a series of vignettes in a common setting, musing on life and death and how the impact of experiences changes over time. Translated from the original German by Susan Bernofsky, the writing is beautiful, without so much as a superfluous word. Erpenbeck (perhaps with Bernofsky’s assistance) has the uncanny knack of coining phrases that, though her invention, sound not only apt but familiar: a grandmother is not alive, but rather, “still on her deathbed”; a child convulsed with giggles is “stuck in her laughter”.