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The Box

Tales from the Dark Room

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Once upon a time there was a father who, because he had grown old, called together his sons and daughters—four, five, six, eight in number—and finally convinced them, after long hesitation, to do as he wished. Now they are sitting around a table and begin to talk..."

In a great literary experiment, Nobel Prize winner Günter Grass writes in the voices of his eight children as they record memories of their childhoods, of growing up, and of their father, who was always at work on a new book, always at the margins of their lives. Memories contradictory, critical, loving, accusatory—they piece together an intimate picture of this most public of men, a shadowy but loving figure. There is one constant though: Marie, a family friend and photographer whose snapshots taken with an old-fashioned Agfa box camera provide the author with inspiration for his novels. But her images offer much more; they reveal a truth beyond the ordinary detail of life, depict the future, tell what might have been, and grant the wishes, in visual form, of those photographed. Marie's camera thus becomes a way for Grass to speak in the voices of his children's hidden selves—their dreams, their disappointments, their secret desires and fears—and to see his own life from unexpected perspectives.

Recalling J. M. Coetzee's Summertime and Umberto Eco's The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana, The Box is an inspired and daring work of fiction. In its candor, wit, and earthiness, it is Grass at his best.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 16, 2010
      Functioning both as experimental fiction and as a sequel of sorts to Peeling the Onion, Grass’s latest sheds light on a role the revered German author has thus far only touched upon: fatherhood. Grass gathers his eight children—dubbed Patrick, Georg, Lara, Taddel, Lena, Nana, Jasper and Paul—to recount memories of their childhoods and of their often absent father. The conversations are being recorded at the fictional Grass’s request, and the memories—and speakers—often overlap as the adult children fall into well-worn patterns of sibling rivalries, though it is Marie, a photographer who is Grass’s constant companion and artistic inspiration, who is the dominant presence in the children’s memories. Her ever-present camera (the box of the title), the children were convinced, was magic. “It sees things that weren’t there. Or shows you things that you’d never in your wildest dreams imagine. It’s all-seeing, my box,” Marie says. Though he controls the puppet strings of his fictionalized progeny, Grass allows their resentments and shared passions to come through as he eloquently opens up his life, once again, to public scrutiny.

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  • English

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