Blameless
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- 14,99 €
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- 14,99 €
Descripción editorial
From one of Europe’s most revered authors, a tale of one man’s obsessive project to collect the instruments of death, evil, and humanity’s darkest atrocities in order to oppose them
Claudio Magris’s searing new novel ruthlessly confronts the human obsession with war and its savagery in every age and every country. His tale centers on a man whose maniacal devotion to the creation of a Museum of War involves both a horrible secret and the hope of redemption. Luisa Brooks, his museum’s curator, a descendant of victims of Jewish exile and of black slavery, has a complex dilemma: will the collections she exhibits save humanity from repeating its tragic and violent past? Or might the display of articles of war actually valorize and memorialize evil atrocities?
In Blameless Magris affirms his mastery of the novel form, interweaving multiple themes and traveling deftly through history. With a multitude of stories, the author investigates individual sorrow, the societal burden of justice aborted, and the ways in which memory and historical evidence are sabotaged or sometimes salvaged.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Magris's ambitious novel, a fragmentary, densely detailed account of one man's obsession with building a "Museum of War for the Advent of Peace," is a collection of anecdotes about the evil that humans do and the banal ways in which that evil survives us. Magris's narrator, inspired by a real-life collector of war memorabilia, grows up in the multicultural and cosmopolitan city of Trieste, Italy, where his early childhood games with toy soldiers impress upon him "the need to eliminate war." He works as a translator for several parties during World War II and eventually amasses a hoard that includes spears, howitzers, submarines, ancient Zapotec weapons, "loads of uniforms, miles of movie film, reams of military documents, and... 2.8 tons of war posters and flyers." But when the collector meets with tragedy along with notebooks in which he may have recorded the names of wartime collaborators who were active in sending people to Italy's only crematorium the task of organizing the museum falls to Luisa Brooks, a local museum curator. Luisa's notes on the collection are interspersed with reflections on history and passages from the collector's writings. Unfortunately, Luisa, the daughter of a black American father and an Italian Jewish mother, never amounts to more than an excuse for Magris to dwell on the suffering of her ancestors. The scope of historical and literary detail that Magris piles up in defense of his theses is impressive, but the prose is ponderous and dwells on clich s.