Product Details
Rain

Rain
By Karen Duve

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


24 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

'The house groaned. Usually it groaned once between three and four in the morning, and sometimes again at around four thirty. The sound woke Leon and Martina up on their first few nights. Then they integrated it into their dreams, which from now on were full of creaking bridges and falling trees. There was also the new wallpaper. It did not stay stuck on well everywhere. Water oozed from the wall in various places, dissolving the paste or leaving tidemarks like unsightly patches of sweat. Water dripped down the insides of the window frames. "It will get better when it stops raining," said Leon.' When Leon Ulbricht lands a contract to write a gangster's memoirs and moves into his dream home in an East German village with his beautiful wife Martina, everything seems set for an idyllic existence. But the dream home turns out to be in the middle of a fetid swamp; his house and his marriage are falling apart; he can't write the book he needs to write and has spent all his advance. It rains without end and their attempts to repair the house, or at least dry it out, are hampered by the plague of slugs eating away at the garden and the foundations.And then the gangster, wondering why his memoirs are not yet completed, decides to get nasty


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1589135 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-11-04
  • Original language: German
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 221 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'Not for the squeamish a modern Gothic' Guardian 'Witty, eccentric deliciously deadpan, lavishly absurd and featuring a supporting cast of slimy swamp creatures, this dark comedy is a razor-edged treat' Publisher's Weekly

About the Author
Karen Duve was born in 1961 and lives in Hamburg. She has been awarded numerous awards for her short stories. RAIN is her first novel.


Customer Reviews

Dark and Dismal4
If you are looking for a jolly laugh-out-loud book then Rain is not for you. The weather throughout is grey, dismal and damp and that pretty much sets the tone for the book as we follow the main character, Leon Ulbricht. His newly acquired house is not the dream location they had hoped for. Like his marriage, it is rotting and crumbling away. Set in marshy muddy countryside the house, like his career and life, is quite literally sinking.

Karen Duve is blessed with a flair for graphic (but never gratuitous) descriptions of the distateful - from the slugs which infest every corner of Leon's life to his wife Martin's battle with her eating disorder. Not to be read when nauseous.

Rain is a challenging and at times disturbing book. An account of a man whose life, marriage, career and health are all in ruins. At times the metaphors are too obvious, and the story is somehwat spoilt by a rather unbelieveable plot twist, however the book makes for a compelling chronicle of squalor, darkness and despair.

German Misfire1
This German novel is not pleasant or fun to read--nor, despite the publisher's marketing, is it particularly funny. Its protagonists are Leon and Martina, a newly married couple who share no common interests, traits, or much of a reason to be married. Leon is a dumpy undistinguished poet who is enlisted by a prominent Hamburg pimp to write his biography--and be paid well for it. With half the money in advance, he and Martina buy a cottage in Eastern Germany and move there permanently to write and live. Martina is a pretty bulimic with zero personality, who seems content to follow Leon around. It doesn't take long for them to realize that their new house is permanently damp and in need of serious repair, and that it never stops raining in their new environs. Moreover, they have weird neighbors (two sisters, one who is a very businesslike lesbian and the other who is an obese earth mother figure), a serious slug problem, and a new sort-of-pet dog.

There's definitely a lot of symbolism going on, as we follow these two unsympathetic types who move from West to East, from city to country, and gradually unravel. This might have been more interesting if there was much to unravel, but they're so incompatible and unlikable to start with, that it's difficult to really care what happens to them. Any kind of grim comedy that might be extracted from the story is offset by a few exceedingly violent and nasty scenes, including a very graphic and disturbing rape. It's shocking stuff, but since we don't really care about these people anyway, what's the point? Duve succeeds at bringing to life the depressing fetidness of the rain and the marshlands, but there are no characters or plotlines to get invested in. Readers with a keen grasp on contemporary German culture and society might get more out of the symbolism, but the outsider is left wondering what the point of it all is.

Best of young German literature4
"Rain" is a highly enjoyable book, full of bizarre characters and plot turns. One of the best books by a German author in recent years!