El ángel del olvido

Author: Maja Haderlap
- Fiction
- Editorial Periférica
- ISBN: 9788416291847
- Release Date: 08-01-2020

Synopsis

Austria, casi en la frontera con Yugoslavia. Arroyos, valles, prados… Un mundo rural, campesino, que se expresa en esloveno y apenas se defiende en alemán. La voz de una niña, una joven, una mujer (el tiempo pasa por estas fascinantes páginas) nos habla de un modo estremecedor pero también poético y familiar. Un padre y un abuelo partisanos que luchan contra los nazis, una abuela que es arrestada y sobrevive (aunque la marcará para siempre) al campo de concentración de Ravensbrück, una madre solitaria que huye de la realidad en su pequeño ciclomotor… Bosques, vacas, gallinas. Héroes anónimos, delatores, fronteras. Pocas veces se ha contado la vida y la muerte como aquí: con tanta capacidad de evocación y tanta lucidez. Con tanto humor y tanto respeto. ¿Qué hace la Historia en mayúsculas con la vida de la gente minúscula?

Malgastada la palabra ética en otros ámbitos, aquí esa palabra confiere al texto un poder admirable: literatura llamada a perdurar.

won the prestigious Bachmann Prize in 2011. The descriptions are sensual, and the unusual similes and metaphors occasionally change perspective unexpectedly. Angel of Oblivion deals with harrowing subjects - murder, torture, persecution and discrimination of an ethnic minority - in intricate and lyrical prose.

The novel tells the story of a family from the Slovenian minority in Austria. The first-person narrator starts off with her childhood memories of rural life, in a community anchored in the past. Yet behind this rural idyll, an unresolved conflict is smouldering. At first, the child wonders about the border to Yugoslavia, which runs not far away from her home. Then gradually the stories that the adults tell at every opportunity start to make sense. All the locals are scarred by the war. Her grandfather, we find out, was a partisan fighting the Nazis from forest hideouts. Her grandmother was arrested and survived Ravensbrück.

As the narrator grows older, she finds out more. Through conversations at family gatherings and long nights talking to her grandmother, she learns that her father was arrested by the Austrian police and tortured - at the age of ten - to extract information on the whereabouts of his father. Her grandmother lost her foster-daughter and many friends and relatives in Ravensbrück and only escaped the gas chamber by hiding inside the camp itself. The narrator begins to notice the frequent suicides and violent deaths in her home region, and she develops an eye for how the Slovenians are treated by the majority of German-speaking Austrians. As an adult, the narrator becomes politicised and openly criticises the way in which Austria deals with the war and its own Nazi past. In the closing section, she visits Ravensbrück and finds it strangely lifeless - realising that her personal memories of her grandmother are stronger.

Illuminating an almost forgotten chapter of European history and the European present, the book deals with family dynamics scarred by war and torture - a dominant grandmother, a long-suffering mother, a violent father who loves his children but is impossible to live with. And interwoven with this is compelling reflection on storytelling: the narrator hoping to rid herself of the emotional burden of her past and to tell stories on behalf of those who cannot.

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