Latest Review: "Amsterdam Stories" by Nescio
The latest addition to our Reviews Section is by Hannah Chute on Amsterdam Stories by Nescio, from New York Review Books.
Hannah is one of two Hannahs interning at Open Letter this summer. We’re still working on a good nickname for her鈥攆or now, depending on the situation, we (read: I) have been referring to the Hannahs as “Hannah” and “Other Hannah.” (If yet another of our interns, Reagan, was also a Hannah, things would get messy. Other Other Hannah?)
Anyway, this relatively small volume of stories by Nescio sounds pretty cool, particularly the chronology of style behind it, and falls into the category of compact volumes from NYRB that I personally can’t wait to dive into鈥攁 fairly long list that (in no particular order) includes .
Here’s the beginning of Hannah’s review:
Nescio, Koekebakker, J.H.F. Gr枚nloh. Writing only in his spare time, he was known to most of the world as a respectable and prominent businessman, the director of the Holland-Bombay Trading Company: exactly the kind of man whom his early protagonists would scorn, and at whom his later protagonists would smile grimly, knowing that 鈥渞espectability鈥 is society鈥檚 code-word for 鈥渉alf-stifled misery.鈥 Producing only a few short stories, he went largely unnoticed during his lifetime, only posthumously gaining a place in the canon of Dutch literature. Now, his poignant and subtly humorous Amsterdam Stories have finally been brought to an English-speaking audience by Damion Searls, an award-winning translator who works with German, Norwegian, French, and Dutch texts.
The nine stories and novellas of this collection, arranged in chronological order of their writing, come together to form a composite portrait of a single life 鈥 quite transparently a version of Nescio鈥檚 own. In his early stories, such as 鈥淭he Freeloader鈥 and 鈥淵oung Titans,鈥 the narrator is Koekebakker, who is idealistic, poor, and (mostly) happy, confident as he is 鈥済oing to do _something_鈥 with his life. A vague, beautiful something that animates him and his group of four like-minded friends. The narrator looks back on this youth with jaded wistfulness: 鈥淲e were kids 鈥 but good kids . . . We鈥檙e much smarter now, so smart it鈥檚 pathetic.鈥 But in spite of this cynicism, it is surprisingly easy to get caught up in the half-baked ideas and humorous antics of Koekebakker & Co. . . .
For the rest of the review, go here.

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