The latest review at The Quarterly Conversation is of Selected Prose of Heinrich von Kleist, an author of which Thomas Mann once said “Kleist’s narrative language is something completely unique.”
Happy endings are in short supply in the Selected Prose of Heinrich von Kleist—a collection of tales that surprisingly calls to mind Giovanni Boccaccio’s The Decameron. The featured characters in von Kleist’s stories tend to be imperiled by those very qualities that human beings treasure most: unflinching love, generosity, loyalty, and a sense of justice. At the end of the day, the protagonists populating these narratives have little left except moral victories. It is a foregone conclusion that things will end badly for them.
The doom and gloom engulfing these characters shouldn’t come as a shock. Writers write what they know, and von Kleist certainly knew a thing or two about disappointment . . .
Agaat by Marlene van Niekerk
The Weather Fifteen Years Ago by Wolf Haas
Bad Books
The Disappearing Digital Data
Beckett’s Poetry
Imperial Fictions
Theresienstadt and the Problem of Knowledge in the Modern World
Reality Hunger Review @ B&N Review
Trash in Contemporary Literature
New @ TQC: JC Hallman & AWP
New @ TQC Sam Lipsyte Interview

I’ve been on the lookout for something like this for a few weeks now. I’ll absolutely have to check him out. Sometimes you need a good doom & gloom read that isn’t Russian and 700 pages thick.
MN
reminds me of the Danish writer Martin Hansen, who wrote ‘The Island’