two or three years later – Three Percent /College/translation/threepercent a resource for international literature at the URochester Mon, 16 Apr 2018 17:34:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 GoodReads Giveaway for "Two or Three Years Later" /College/translation/threepercent/2013/03/19/goodreads-giveaway-for-two-or-three-years-later/ /College/translation/threepercent/2013/03/19/goodreads-giveaway-for-two-or-three-years-later/#respond Tue, 19 Mar 2013 16:00:00 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2013/03/19/goodreads-giveaway-for-two-or-three-years-later/ Our new GoodReads Giveaway is for Ror Wolf’s Two or Three Years Later: Forty-Nine Digressions, which was translated from the German by Jennifer Marquart and is coming out in June. After struggling for a week this summer trying to figure out to describe this book, we came up with some killer jacket copy—one of the few examples of jacket copy that I’m actually proud of:

bq, Working in the traditions of Robert Walser, Robert Pinget, and Laurence Sterne, Ror Wolf creates strangely entertaining and condensed stories that call into question the very nature of what makes a story a story. Almost an anti-book, Two or Three Years Later: Forty-Nine Digressions takes as its basis the small, diurnal details of life, transforming these oft-overlooked ordinary experiences of nondescript people in small German villages into artistic meditations on ambiguity, repetition, and narrative.

Incredibly funny and playful, Two or Three Years Later is unlike anything you’ve ever read—from German or any other language. These stories of men observing other men, of men who may or may not have been wearing a hat on a particular Monday (or was it Tuesday?), are delightful word-puzzles that are both intriguing and enjoyable.

You can read an and you can click below to enter the drawing.

Book Giveaway


by

Giveaway ends March 31, 2013.

See the
at Goodreads.

]]>
/College/translation/threepercent/2013/03/19/goodreads-giveaway-for-two-or-three-years-later/feed/ 0
Latest Review: Two or Three Years Later /College/translation/threepercent/2008/02/12/latest-review-two-or-three-years-later/ /College/translation/threepercent/2008/02/12/latest-review-two-or-three-years-later/#respond Tue, 12 Feb 2008 19:22:13 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2008/02/12/latest-review-two-or-three-years-later/ Our latest review is of Ror Wolf’s Two or Three Years Later: Forty-Nine Digressions by Hannah Johnson. Hannah works at the and runs the blog And she’s a big fan of Lost.

Aside from the fantastically odd that Schoffling & Co. sent us, I’m intrigued by the fact that a story takes place in Mörfelden—the crazy suburb E.J. and I stayed in for the Frankfurt Book Fair.

]]>
/College/translation/threepercent/2008/02/12/latest-review-two-or-three-years-later/feed/ 0
Two or Three Years Later: Forty-Nine Digressions /College/translation/threepercent/2008/02/12/two-or-three-years-later-forty-nine-digressions/ /College/translation/threepercent/2008/02/12/two-or-three-years-later-forty-nine-digressions/#respond Tue, 12 Feb 2008 19:02:11 +0000 http://www.wdev.rochester.edu/College/translation/threepercent-dev/2008/02/12/two-or-three-years-later-forty-nine-digressions/ Two or Three Years Later is a unique collection of short stories, many only half a page long. Each sentence has been distilled down to only the essential words, yet Wolf’s stories retain a very conversational quality. He often speaks directly to the reader, saying he is sure that the reader is curious to hear this or that about the story in question. Sometimes Wolf will cut himself off mid-sentence and begin his story again. All of these techniques make the bare bones of the writing process visible throughout this book. The reader becomes a part of the author’s struggle to find meaning in his characters and their lives, yet the confidence with which Wolf displays this struggle allows the reader to trust that there is meaning here.

The search for meaning in our everyday lives and in the lives of unknown strangers is paramount. Many episodes are told with little direct commentary, instead consisting of a series of events. On the first page of a two-and-a-half page story, “Ein Unglück im Westen, am 13. Mai” (“Misfortune in the West on May 13th”), a nameless man goes for a walk and sees a homeless man die, a car hits a tree before sinking into a nearby lake, another man falls off a roof, and a set of keys are lost in a canal. On the second page, a man sees a woman almost get hit by a bicyclist, a man reports that a body has fallen on top of his car, and while the police find out that this man is a criminal many times over, the homeless man dies at the same moment in another city. The story ends with the author telling the reader that he met the nameless man who went for a walk and wrote down his story.

This constant author-reader dialogue begs the question, where is the real story? Is the real story that of the nameless man walking down the street, or is it the story of an author writing a story? The ultimate conclusion I came to was that the process of writing, the examination of the ordinary and the extraordinary, is what is meaningful, and Wolf is seeking to create a dialogue with his readers about exactly that. Influenced by surrealism and absurdism, Wolf constantly probes the various situations that people create, and these stories reflect his satisfaction with the idea of art for art’s sake.

Admittedly, I found these stories repetitive and a bit frustrating at first. What changed my mind was the very last story, which is significantly longer than the rest and much more revealing of Wolf’s intentions. Told in the first person, this last story is broken into twelve short chapters. Set after the war, (when a nameless stranger asks the narrator which war, he replies, “any war”), the narrator drifts along on trains and boats, from Europe to Africa. In place of an author-reader dialogue is a narrator-stranger dialogue, and here Wolf reveals the questions he expects his readers to ask. I began rereading some of the earlier stories, looking for the questions I, as the reader should ask. In one very short story, Wolf writes that a man tries to grab a woman on the street, but the woman gets away, and nobody knows what the man wanted. Such a brief and seemingly meaningless account actually provokes the reader to finish reading the story, to wonder what that man really wanted.

From this perspective, Two or Three Years Later is a very engaging and active text, despite its first impression. Whether Wolf is arguing with himself over whether or not to write a story about a town called Mörfelden (and thereby writing a story about Mörfelden), or whether he recounts the uneventful events of a town hall meeting in Memphis, Tennessee, the reader cannot help but be involved in the process of creating a story.

Ror Wolf had been a mainstay in the German cultural scene since the 1960s, experimenting with collage art, radio collages, and other audio media. His star power probably encouraged many German readers to wade through this metafictional collection of stories. Although American readers—are less familiar with Ror Wolf—andmight not have the same motivation, it is ultimately worth the journey.


(Two or Three Years Later: Forty-Nine Digressions)
By Ror Wolf
Schoeffling & Co.
200 pages
€ 18.90
ISBN: 978-3-89561-321-0


translated by Anthea Bell available from Schoeffling & Co.

]]>
/College/translation/threepercent/2008/02/12/two-or-three-years-later-forty-nine-digressions/feed/ 0