The Meeting at Telgte explained

The Meeting at Telgte
Author:Günter Grass
Title Orig:Das Treffen in Telgte
Translator:Ralph Manheim
Country:West Germany
Language:German
Publisher:Luchterhand
Pub Date:1979
English Pub Date:1981
Pages:182
Isbn:347286480X

The Meeting at Telgte (German: '''Das Treffen in Telgte''') is a 1979 novel by the West German writer Günter Grass. The narrative revolves around a fictional meeting for intellectuals hosted by Simon Dach during the Thirty Years' War. The story combines a depiction of leading seventeenth-century literary figures with an analogy for the post-World War II society in Germany, and of Group 47 in West Germany, of which Grass was a member.

Reception

Theodore Ziolkowski wrote in The New York Times that "Grass has chosen his historical analogy with brilliant precision" and that "the book is diverting as a history of 17th-century German literature, liberally sprinkled with quotations from the works and poetic treatises of the period." Ziolkowski continued: "All in all, however, the story remains a lifeless literary construct. The author, whose unerring sense of place put his native Danzig on the literary map along with Kafka's Prague, Joyce's Dublin, and Bellow's Chicago, has not succeeded in giving us a persuasive Westphalian town of the 17th century. With the exception of Dach and the young Grimmelshausen, whose ebullient novels anticipated Grass's own explosive works, none of the literary figures comes alive."[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ziolkowski. Theodore. Theodore Ziolkowski. 1981-05-17. Historical Analogy. The New York Times. 2014-05-09.