From an internationally acclaimed, multi award-winning author: this is a story of love and betrayal set in Berlin during the years before and after the fall of the Wall.
Jenny Erpenbeck is the author of The Old Child & The Book of Words (2008), Visitation (2010) and The End of Days (2014, winner of the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize), and Go, Went, Gone (2017). as well as Not a Novel: Collected Writings and Reflections (2020). Her work is translated into over thirty languages.
Erpenbeck has proved time and again that she is a fearless, astute
examiner of a country's soul... Kairos powerfully examines
individual as well as collective history
*Economist*
An ambitious story of love and betrayal
*Irish Times*
Carefully structured and [...] emotionally resonant... As ever with
Erpenbeck, history makes mincemeat of those swept along in its
wake: which is to say, all of us. Kairos furthers the conviction
that Erpenbeck is a dead cert for a future Nobel prize
*Guardian*
A subtle, richly layered, densely allusive and hugely ambitious
novel... Kairos is an impressive achievement that has deepened my
admiration for Erpenbeck's talent for weaving into her fiction
clashes of ideology and convulsions of history
*Spectator*
An extraordinary story of twisted love that unspools in East Berlin
during the last years of the GDR... Like all the best allegories,
Kairos cannot be reduced to a single, unambiguous message. Kairos
is an autopsy of those broken bonds that you were sure would last
forever
*Sunday Telegraph*
A new book from German author Jenny Erpenbeck is always worthy of
note and Kairos is no exception... This is Erpenbeck at her
brilliant best. One of the great fictional chroniclers of modern
Europe
*New European*
Erpenbeck is a writer with a roving, furious, brilliant mind.
Kairos bears with it the absolute urgency of existential
questions... Erpenbeck's handling of characters caught within the
mesh (and mess) of history is superb.
*Los Angeles Times*
Erpenbeck is among the most sophisticated and powerful novelists we
have. Clinging to the undercarriage of her sentences, like
fugitives, are intimations of Germany's politics, history and
cultural memory. It's no surprise that she is already bruited as a
future Nobelist
*New York Times*
Kairos is one of the bleakest and most beautiful novels I have ever
read
*Guardian*
Stylishly translated by Michael Hofmann, this is a finely
calibrated book... Erpenbeck's subtle use of mirroring reflects the
unbreakable links that remained between East and West Germany
*Observer*
An intimate account of obsessive, transgressive passion. Erpenbeck
writes masterfully about time
*Harper's*
Here's an early contender for novel of the year... There's
jealousy, deception, surveillance, cruelty. Pulsing with emotion,
it's a beautiful, upsetting work
*Telegraph*
Kairos effectively captures the generational divide in Germany at
the time of reunification... The end of the affair is a clever
analogue for the demise of the socialist experiment
*Financial Times*
Revelling in complexity and ambiguity, Erpenbeck knows that no one
is all bad, no state all rotten, and she masterfully captures...
existential bewilderment
*TLS*
In Erpenbeck, Germany has a rare national writer whose portrayals
of a ruptured country and century are a reminder that novelists can
treat history in ways that neither historians nor politicians ever
could, cutting through dogma, fracturing time, preserving rubble...
Erpenbeck's novels point us beyond her nation's particular
convulsions; they are about capturing what humans leave behind as
other humans follow them-the ruins we must live with, even as they
molder
*Atlantic*
This clever narrative offers an uncomfortable allegory of life
under the Stasi, and the finale packs a punch
*Daily Mail*
Erpenbeck...weaves together her story of loss, lies and betrayal
(in both the personal and political spheres) with tremendous skill;
artfully translated by Michael Hofmann
*Collagerie*
In this granular and, at times, shockingly intimate narrative of an
all-consuming love affair that ultimately turns abusive, Jenny
Erpenbeck has written an allegory of her nation, a country that has
ceased to exist -- East Germany. No writer on the world stage can
make the texture and details of individual lives articulate so
seamlessly and unobtrusively the way humans are subjects of, and
subjected to, history. The ending is like a bomb thrown into your
room -- you'll be reeling for days and weeks to come.
*Neel Mukherjee*
How calmly, and with what certainty, Jenny Erpenbeck invents
love... Katharina and Hans narrate their own seduction, their
voices sliding past each other in Erpenbeck's exquisite ink...
Theirs is the kind of passion that bursts open like a soft fruit
dropped onto a hard floor, but Erpenbeck makes you believe in it...
An elegant novel
*The Times*
Kairos [...] swiftly takes the reader back in time... Erpenbeck's
narrative soon turns dark, weaving personal and political with a
deft hand
*Radio Times*
Kairos is a fearsomely symmetrical novel... It's a novel that comes
as close as fiction can allow to representing the shared or double
consciousness that arises when we fall in love... profoundly
involving
*Literary Review*
[Erpenbeck] writes confident, sexy sentences... The novel's
political allegory is smarter than most
*The Times and Sunday Times*
[A] rigorously beautiful novel
*Telegraph*
[Kairos] affected me greatly... it has really stayed with me
*Irish Independent*
I haven't read a better novel in a long while. Love in a time of
upheaval may be a much explored subject, but this take on it is
special
*Spectator*
Bleak, beautiful and profound
*Telegraph*
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