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Words that flow like wine

New translation of a European classic demonstrates the power of great writing to reflect a cultural melange

September 7, 2012 10:25
Czernowitz: starting point for a production-line of great novelists and poets

By

Clive Sinclair

2 min read

When it comes to writers, Czernowitz — first Austro-Hungarian, then Romanian, now Ukrainian — surely merits its own Appellation d’origine contrôlée. There must be something in its terroir that causes (or caused) it to produce so many great novelists and poets: Aharon Appelfeld, Norman Manea, Dan Pagis, Paul Celan; not to mention Gregor von Rezzori.

Among these, the late von Rezzori is the only non-Jew. Moreover, his most famous book is entitled Memoirs of an Anti-Semite. When it was first published, many years ago, I interviewed him for this newspaper. An irate reader, mistaking fiction for confession, ended a tirade with the words: “May you both roast in hell”. In fact, von Rezzori was probably less deserving of the curse than me, as this wonderful novel bears witness.

An Ermine in Czernopol (first published in 1966, but newly and gracefully translated by Philip Boehm) is a fictionalised portrait of Czernowitz, as it appeared to its narrator (unnamed but presumably von Rezzori himself) between the two world wars. It demonstrates how great writing can emerge from a mishmash of nationalities, religions, cultures, political philosophies and sexual habits.

The narrator saturates the pages with memories of his parents; his aunts; his sister Tanya (doomed to die at 20); the worldly Romanian governor; the brigand who made a fortune and built a replica of the Taj Mahal to house his dead wives; his two daughters, one a drug addict, the other a nymphomaniac; of Major Tildy, who married the first. Tildy is so dedicated to the redundant mores of the Austro-Hungarian empire that he challenges to a duel all who call into question the chastity of his sister-in-law.

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