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Forced into a brutal concentration camp during a great war, Brodeck returns to his village at the war's end and takes up his old job of writing reports for a governmental bureau. One day a stranger comes to live in the village. His odd manner and habits arouse suspicions: His speech is formal, he takes long, solitary walks, and although he is unfailingly friendly and polite, he reveals nothing about himself. When the stranger produces drawings of the village and its inhabitants that are both unflattering and insightful, the villagers murder him. The authorities who witnessed the killing tell Brodeck to write a report that is essentially a whitewash of the incident. As Brodeck writes the official account, he sets down his version of the truth in a separate, parallel narrative. In measured, evocative prose, he weaves into the story of the stranger his own painful history and the dark secrets the villagers have vigilantly keep hidden. Set in an unnamed time and place, Brodeck blends the familiar and unfamiliar, myth and history into a work of extraordinary power and resonance. Readers of J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace, Bernhard Schlink's The Reade,r and Kafka will be captivated by Brodeck.
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Subjects
Fiction, Literature, Lynching, Murder, Investigation, World War, 1939-1945, Social Marginality, InfluenceEdition | Availability |
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Brodeck
2009, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Electronic resource
in English
0385530099 9780385530095
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History
- Created June 17, 2010
- 4 revisions
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August 4, 2012 | Edited by VacuumBot | Updated format 'electronic resource' to 'Electronic resource' |
April 29, 2011 | Edited by OCLC Bot | Added OCLC numbers. |
June 18, 2010 | Edited by ImportBot | Added new cover |
June 17, 2010 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from marc_overdrive MARC record |