The Brummstein
By examining the minute connections, unlikely coincidences, and painstaking natural processes that give shape to the daily world, the work of Danish author Peter Adolphsen encapsulates鈥攂oth in form and content鈥擝lake鈥檚 image of 鈥渁 world in a grain of sand.鈥 This has never been more literally true than in his most recently translated work, The Brummstein. Beginning in 1907, and ending over eighty years later, the novella follows a mysteriously humming stone found deep within a Swiss cave through its series of unlikely owners: a hapless German anarchist and his young Jewish sweetheart, a retired ticket clerk at a railway station lost & found, an orphan boy living alone in the woods, an avant-garde artist, and a museum curator. In following the ownership of the stone, The Brummstein also traces a crash course through European (German) history鈥攊n less than 80 pages, the reader experiences both World Wars, Spanish Flu, the rise of the Soviet GDR, and the fall of the Berlin Wall. But, rather than focus on a larger, more sweeping narrative, The Brummstein is told on a much more personal, human scale.
Adolphsen has not yet been fully translated into English, but a good start has been made with the 2009 translation of his excellent novella Machine, and excerpts from his collections Small Stories I and Small Stories II, which were included in 2011鈥檚 Best European Fiction Anthology. Readers familiar with these other works will recognize many of the author鈥檚 prevailing thematic interests, as well as his favorite formal constraints in The Brummstein.
The book starts with a playful explanation of 鈥渢he constant orogeny of the Alps,鈥 and how the formation of the earth might be conceptualized on a time-line. 鈥. . . if we apply the famous metaphor which depicts the Earth鈥檚 age as a calendar year,鈥 the narrator begins,
when dinosaurs became extinct on Boxing Day, hominids emerge on New Year鈥檚 Eve, and when, at the time of writing, ten seconds have passed since the Roman Empire鈥檚 five seconds expired, then these events took place on December 19 and 23 respectively. In the West, the process of comprehending this vast expanse of time commenced just one and a half geological seconds ago . . .
There鈥檚 a PBS-narrator quality to Adolphsen鈥檚 explanations of the natural world, which manage to be clinical and dignified while simultaneously geeking out about how awesome geology is. (Machine, with its first page explanations of the petrification of a prehistoric horse, which eons later becomes a drop of gasoline, maintains the same delightful tone.)
But the book鈥檚 concern is not really the Brummstein鈥攖he mysterious humming stone that an amateur explorer looking for the entrance to another world finds at the beginning of the story is basically a MacGuffin. This has been true for many other “lives of objects” narratives as well鈥擩enny Erpenbach鈥檚 Visitation and Nicole Krauss鈥檚 Great House come to mind鈥攁nd is not in itself that unique a premise. What makes The Brummstein special, then, is Adolphsen鈥檚 incredible specificity and gift for compressing deeply incisive observations into just a few short passages.
It鈥檚 rare that the full emotional weight of a relationship or a life can be concisely summarized鈥攋ust think of how bland many obituaries are. But this is precisely what Adolphsen excels at. Consider a passage in which we鈥檙e introduced to Georg Wiede, an elderly retiree in Germany during WWII. After his apartment was destroyed by Allied air raids, Georg moves to a railway station lost and found hut:
It wasn鈥檛 until December 1943 that Georg finally overcame the inhibitions which had so far deterred him from helping himself to the lost items. He was driven by a noble motive: hunger. One of the suitcases might contain a tin of goulash or a bag of boiled sweets. He organized clothing such as coats and hats in neat piles at one end of the hut, making sure that each item retained its original ticket. Then he turned his attention to the suitcases, briefcases, et cetera. One by one he placed them on the table, and feeling like a surgeon with a patient on the operating table, he opened them up and laid out the contents in regimented lines. Then he returned the items in reverse order less anything he needed, which included two fountain pens, a small pile of books, a little money, some clothes, and an antique pocket watch. Whenever he took something, he would replace it with a small note with a brief description of the object and the following sentence: “I, Georg Weide, took this item of lost property in a time of great need.”
When it doesn鈥檛 work, The Brummstein tends to undercut its emotional resonance with an unsettling sense of absurdity that borders on nihilism. More than one character is dispatched in a freak accident鈥攆or instance, a married couple survives Spanish Flu only to be crushed by a chaise lounge falling from an apartment window. The narrative also drops off abruptly and unresolved, which may be alluding to the continuation of the story outside of the novella, but instead feels slightly apathetic.
If, in the end, The Brummstein has some shortcomings, these are mostly recognizable only in comparison to Adolphsen鈥檚 more polished Machine which, it should be noted, was written a few years later. Overall, it is a remarkably creative, unique, and resonant work, which can鈥攁nd should鈥攂e read in one satisfying sitting.

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