Searching for times past, she gradually realises that memory, imagination and reality do not always match up and that perhaps the «original feeling of innocence» of her childhood was only imagined. Hasn't the brutality of the Romanian Ceausescu regime always been lurking behind the tinted film of the images in her memory? The psychologically sensitive novel ultimately careers towards a tragic realisation. It is only now that it dawns on Victoria how her childish delight in making up stories must have led her to betray her own mother.
From the narrative's juxtaposition of different places and timeframes emerges, in the words of the German writer W.G. Sebald, an 'unheimliche Heimat' (uncanny home). Even story-telling only provides a limited remedy. Tearing open old wounds wherever it ventures, the narrative itself is heavy with guilt. The often absurd, surreal quirks of everyday life create the moving tragicomic ambivalence that characterises this complex novel.
(Marc Caduff, trans. by Andrea Willfratt)
Translation of title: An Instinctive Feeling of Innocence
Dörlemann, Zürich 2015
ISBN: 978-3-03820-921-8
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