October means another crop of exciting new fiction in translation! This time, we feature writers from France, Norway, and Japan.
If you’ve already read, or plan to read, any of these novels, tell us
your thoughts in the comments. Also, let us know which works in
translation you’ve read recently!
And finally, mark your calendars: the 2014 Neustadt Festival of International Literature and Culture (hosted by World Literature Today),
which features writers and scholars from Africa, Europe and the United
States, will take place on the University of Oklahoma Norman campus Oct.
22 through 24.
Allons-y!
The Goddess of Small Victories by Yannick Grannec, transl. by Willard Wood (Other Press, 464 pages, October 14)
In this fictionalized biography of the great 20th-century
mathematician Kurt Gödel, Grannec offers us a glimpse into the post-WWII
world of exiled genius at Princeton University (Einstein was a
colleague at the school’s Institute for Advanced Study). When a young
librarian tries to retrieve Gödel’s papers from his widow many years
after his death, memories of Nazi occupation, McCarthyism, and the
advent of nuclear weapons intrude into the present and reveal a
tormented genius. Winner of ten prizes in France, including the 2013
Booksellers Prize (Prix des Libraries), The Goddess of Small Victories will prove to be an enchanting read.
Doppler by Erlend Loe, transl. by Don Bartlett & Don Shaw (Head of Zeus, 176 pages, October)
Described as a “charming, absurd, and subversive novel” that critiques modern consumerism, Doppler
is nothing if not intriguing. At under 200 pages, Loe’s story about a
man who gives up everything to move to the woods and befriend its animal
inhabitants offers us a tantalizing glimpse into an alternative
existence. A Norwegian novelist, screenwriter, and film critic, Loe is
known for his minimalist stories.
Last Winter We Parted by Fuminori Nakamura, transl. by Allison Markin Powell (Soho Press, 224 pages, Soho Press)
Nakamura’s first novel translated into English, The Thief, was nominated for the LA Times
Book Prize in 2012. In his latest creation, the author weaves together
elements of the psychological thriller and the philosophy of aesthetics
to ask if anyone can truly capture identity in art. When a young writer
interviews a prisoner about his supposed crimes, what is revealed by the
accused’s portfolio of photographs calls into question everything the
writer’s been told about the murders that took place. Last Winter We Parted has been compared to the work of Osamu Dazai and Patricia Highsmith.
(first posted on Book Riot 10/19/14)
I just started a subscription to *World Literature Today* (no idea how to do italics in a comment) and I am incredibly excited! I became addicted to works in translation while stationed in Japan and have not looked back. I am always looking for more to explore and you continue to provide quite a few for me to seek out, thank you!
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