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On the Marble Cliffs

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

On the Marble Cliffs

Contributors:

By (Author) Ernst Jnger
Translated by Tess Lewis

ISBN:

9781681376257

Publisher:

The New York Review of Books, Inc

Imprint:

NYRB Classics

Publication Date:

21st March 2023

UK Publication Date:

31st January 2023

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

833.912

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

136

Dimensions:

Width 127mm, Height 203mm

Description

Now in a new translation, an imaginative, darkly radiant fable about a pair of brothers, formerly warriors, whose idyll is shattered by an enroaching fascistic force. Set in a world of its own, Ernst J nger's On the Marble Cliffs is both a mesmerizing work of fantasy and an allegory of the advent of fascism. The narrator of the book and his brother, Otho, live in an ancient house carved out of the great marble cliffs that overlook the Marina, a great and beautiful lake that is surrounded by a peaceable land of ancient cities and temples and flourishing vineyards. To the north of the cliffs are the grasslands of the Campagna, occupied by herders. North of that, the great forest begins. There the brutal Head Forester rules, abetted by the warrior bands of the Mauretanians. The brothers have seen all too much of war. Their youth was consumed in fighting. Now they have resolved to live quietly, studying botany, adding to their herbarium, consulting the books in their library, involving themselves in the timeless pursuit of knowledge. However, rumors of dark deeds begin to reach them in their sanctuary. Agents of the Head Forester are infiltrating the peaceful provinces he views with contempt, while peace itself, it seems, may only be a mask for heedlessness. Tess Lewis's new translation of J nger's sinister fable of 1939 brings out all of this legendary book's dark luster.

Reviews

The classical beauty of the writing, in Tess Lewiss exquisite translation, gives a sense of the authors sympathies. . . . [H]is short, prismatic book is beautiful. Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal

[A] literary achievement of the highest order. Nil Santiez, The Massachusetts Review

[Jnger] was a sporadic critic of the moral obtuseness that grew like vines all around him. Thomas Meany, Harpers Magazine

Jngers coolly detached empirical style, with its Nietzschean cadences evident in On the Marble Cliffs, has its detractors. . . . Yet the primacy of his poetic imagination, his born naturalists observational perceptiveness, and the noble humanness undergirding his writing lend it unequivocal greatness.Will Stone, Times Literary Supplement

On the Marble Cliffs might be called Jngers descent into the maelstrom, a record of terror seen and survived. . . . An allegory that does not moralize, its hermeticism is inviolable and inimitable. Thomas R. Nevin, Ernst Jnger and Germany: Into the Abyss, 19141945

On the Marble Cliffs is a great book and virtually no one Ive ever mentioned it to has read it. W.S. Merwin

Author Bio

Ernst J nger (1895-1998) was a German philosopher, writer, and entomologist who became widely known for Storm of Steel, his memoir of World War I. He was the author of six novels, including The Glass Bees (available from NYRB Classics), and dozens of works of philosophy. During his lifetime, he received the Goethe Prize as well as the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. Tess Lewis has translated works from the French and German, including books by Peter Handke, Anselm Kiefer, and Christine Angot, and for NYRB Classics, The Storyteller Essays by Walter Benjamin. Her awards include the 2017 PEN Translation Prize and a Guggenheim fellowship. She serves as the co-chair of the PEN Translation Committee and is an advisory editor for The Hudson Review. Jessi Jezewska Stevens is the author of the novels The Exhibition of Persephone Q and The Visitors. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The New Yorker, Foreign Policy, The Paris Review, and elsewhere.

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