Dark Satellites
By (Author) Clemens Meyer
Translated by Katy Derbyshire
Fitzcarraldo Editions
Fitzcarraldo Editions
20th January 2020
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction in translation
833.92
Paperback
224
Width 127mm, Height 195mm
A train driver's life is upended when he hits a laughing man on the tracks on his night shift; a lonely train cleaner makes friends with a hairdresser in the train station bar; and a young man, unable to return to his home after a break-in, wanders the city in a state of increasing unrest. From the home to places of work, Meyer transforms the territories of our everyday lives into sites of rupture and connection.
Unsentimental and yet deeply moving, Dark Satellites is a collection of stories from our time, as dark as the world, as beautiful as the brightest of hopes.
'Figures from society's margins are at the centre of the stories... Dark Satellites throws a perceptive light on circumscribed lives on the edges of Europe.' - David Mills, The Sunday Times
'Clemens Meyer's great art of describing people takes the form of the Russian doll principle: a story within a story within a story. From German jihad to a Prussian refugee drama, so much is so artfully interwoven that his work breaks the mould of the closed narrative. Images of history extending into the present are what make this collection a literary sensation.' - Katharina Teutsch, Die Zeit
'Meyer's writing is brittle, laconic, clear, intense - and once again on top form. Short stories are clearly his forte. He finds memorable images for his themes: a dance without music in an unused Russian canteen; a midnight haircut; a man who slides into another identity after a break-in to his home and leaves his briefcase, the last requisite of his old life, in an abandoned shop. Meyer's stories are quiet, tragic and once again populated by ordinary people, for whom he has always harboured sympathies.' - Steffen Roye, Am Erker
'Meyer's snapshots of urban life - a burger bar, a fairground wheel, a neglected train station - are so vivid they make you see your own surroundings in the light of those faraway buildings.' - Anna Aslanyan, Spectator
Clemens Meyer was born 1977 in Halle and lives in Leipzig. Bricks and Mortar, his latest novel, was shortlisted for the German Book Prize awarded the Bremer Literaturpreis 2014, longlisted for the 2017 Man Booker International Prize, and shortlisted for the 2019 Best Translated Book Awards. A collection of stories, Dark Satellites, appeared with Fitzcarraldo Editions in 2020.