A man, who was once a handsome man, is admitted to hospital as an emergency – and the night nurse, who has to care for him, is suddenly confronted with her past. In another of Elsässer’s stories, two women land in an old people’s home: they’ve forgotten that they are mother and daughter. Or there’s this tale: a visit to a dying aunt leads us into a world both familiar and unfamiliar: «Emma, whispered the aunt. That was my mother’s name. I only ever called her ‘mother’, the name Emma alienated me. Emma, or mother, sat down at her bedside.»
Lisa Elsässer’s short stories are taken from life – and life doesn’t always turn out successfully. Whether in a cramped room in a farmhouse in the Schächental or at a desk down on the plains, whether in a cemetery or in Italy, ghosts and hidden dangers lurk. And these force out memories, drag the unsaid and the repressed into the light. Lisa Elsässer’s blunt and individualistic prose crystallises the two great themes of literature: life and death.
(Martin Zingg, translated by Max Easterman, Rosie Goldsmith)
Recommended for translation by the Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia: www.12swissbooks.ch
Translation of title: Fire is a Strange Thing
Rotpunktverlag, Zürich 2013
ISBN: 978-3-85869-554-3