Sweet Days of Discipline

(Author) (Translator)
Available

Product Details

Price
$13.95  $12.97
Publisher
New Directions Publishing Corporation
Publish Date
Pages
112
Dimensions
5.1 X 7.8 X 0.4 inches | 0.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780811229036
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Fleur Jaeggy-- "a wonderful, brilliant, savage writer" (Susan Sontag) --was born in 1940 in Zurich and lives in Milan. Her work has been acclaimed as "small-scale, intense, and impeccably focused "(The New Yorker) and "addictive" (Kirkus).
Tim Parks is the author of more than twenty novels and works of nonfiction, including the best-selling Italian Neighbors and An Italian Education. His novels include Europa which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. His essays have appeared in the The New Yorker and the New York Review of Books. Parks is also a renowned translator from the Italian and lives in Verona.

Reviews

Violence dredged from the depths of consciousness is the most darkly glittering seam running through this world. Exhilarating.--Laura McLean-Ferris
Reading Jaeggy is not unlike diving naked and headlong into a bramble of black rosebushes, so intrigued you are by their beauty: it's a swift, prickly undertaking, and you emerge the other end bloodied all over.--Daniel Johnson
Dipped in the blue ink of adolescence, Fleur Jaeggy's pen is an engraver's needle depicting roots, twigs, and branches of the tree of madness: Extraordinary prose. Reading time is approximately four hours. Remembering time, as for its author: the rest of one's life.--Joseph Brodsky
Jaeggy's astute compression of narrative detail is at once serene and startling. Beneath a placid, opalescent surface lurks a threat of violence that may or may not be realized, but which contributes to the profound impression that people and their lives are unpredictable, coursing with icy, barren wildness.--Emily LaBarge
Jaeggy seems to have crushed a glass in her palm and tweezed out a few shards for the page. Her prose is indeed extraordinary...it is also frightening.
Clocking in at a sharp 101 pages, you're finished before you can lodge a complaint, its contents going down as smoothly as a martini served in an ice-cold glass.--Kaitlin Phillips