Two Or Three Years Later: Forty Nine Digressions
By (Author) Ror Wolf
Open Letter
Open Letter
18th June 2013
United States
General
Fiction
833.914
Paperback
152
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
224g
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 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 utterly unique in its depiction of everyday life.
"Wolf refuses to let readers find the stable hold of realist fiction in his narratives, yet he does so without resorting to surrealist trickeryfor that alone already the pieces are of interest; it's not something one sees often."Ror Wolf, The Complete Review "Wolf's book is fast, sometimes outrageous, and always surreal."Shaun Randol, World Literature Today "Ror Wolf's miniature stories about everyday catastrophes undermine traditional storytelling. They are extremely fresh and incredibly funny."Martin Halter, Tagesanzeiger"Wolf takes familiar scraps from crime, romance, and adventure stories, rearranges them and glues them together with a melodious language that drives everything to the extreme. The result is purely absurd and at the same time magical."Peter Zemla, Buchjournal "One of the most important contemporary German writers."Brigitte Kronauer, Bchner Award recipient "Ror Wolf has rejected every typical form of storytelling. What is the reader left with A particular lightness in one's head, a bright glimpse into the madness of daily life."Deutschlandradio Kultur "I don't have a book to review by a surrealist German author and poet who wrote forty-nine digressions that each barely spanned the length of a single page. I've never read such a thing. I also don't have a thing to report to you about the devastating effects of firing a bullet into a person's urethra, because the author in question has asked me not to relay this information. I have never and most certainly not at a convention of plumbers lectured on the duties of newly elected government officials to a packed audience and then retold an anecdote about the experience later. I know not a single thing about any Sound Expansion Plans and I've never uttered a single bad word towards any of the members of the men's choir of Nevada. Furthermore, it's patently false that I repeated a story to multiple parties regarding the tremendous yawning of a New York salesman who turned the corner of 82nd Street at nightfall. That I have, at one time or another, placed sticks of dynamite on my head and then attached their fuses to a kitchen timer, is completely made up. It is not true. The only truth is that every one of these events was not described by me, but by the author of the aforementioned digressions which I've allegedly never read, and which some seem to claim that I did not enjoy. But that is not the point of this review."Aaron Westerman, Typographical Era
Ror Wolf is an artist, an author of prose and poetry, and a writer of radio plays and 'radio collages'. His writing has earned him many awards, including Radio Play of the Year, the Kassel Literature Prize for Grotesque Humor, and the Literature Award of the Bavarian Academy of Fine Arts. Jennifer Marquart studied German and translation at the University of Rochester. She has lived, continued her studies, and taught in Cologne and Berlin.