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The Island of Second Sight (1953)

av Albert Vigoleis Thelen

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270598,181 (3.77)22
An English-language release of a German award-winner originally published in 1953 traces the largely autobiographical experiences of inventor Vigoleis, who with his wife scrapes out an existence in 1930s Mallorca and befriends literary figures and Jewish neighbors before making Nazi enemies and plotting a daring escape during the Spanish Civil War.… (mer)
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» Se även 22 omnämnanden

engelska (2)  nederländska (1)  tyska (1)  Alla språk (4)
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Eerste uitgave van deze autobiografische roman + Losse bijlage: aanbiedingsbrochure van de uitgeverij (Nederlandstalig)
  lest | Jan 8, 2020 |
Zu Lebzeiten hatte Thelen mit seinem Buch zunächst gar nicht so viel Erfolg. Bei der Gruppe 47 wurde er von oben herab behandelt.
Doch das Buch ist eine Art Longseller, wird von namhaften Autoren (Siegfried Lenz, Paul Celan, Thomas Mann) empfohlen und hat auch ein sehr interessantes Thema.
„Das Buch schildert den Aufenthalt Thelens und seiner Frau Beatrice während der Jahre 1931–1936 auf Mallorca. Die beiden landen als Bohème-Emigranten und verlassen fünf Jahre später während des spanischen Bürgerkrieges fluchtartig die Insel. In diesen Jahren lebt das Ehepaar in ärmlichen und abenteuerlichen Verhältnissen unter manchmal zwielichtigen Figuren. Es macht die Bekanntschaft mit zahlreichen interessanten Menschen aller Gesellschaftsschichten und übt, um überleben zu können, je nach Gegebenheiten unterschiedliche Berufe aus, unter anderem als Schreiber, Fremdenführer, Sprachlehrer und Hotelmanager. In ihren Erlebnissen spiegelt sich die Zeit des damaligen Mallorca genauso wider wie ihre Bedrohung durch den aufkommenden Nationalsozialismus.“ (Wikipedia)
Ich fand, dass das Buch tatsächlich eine Art Schelmenroman ist. Einerseits dieses in den Tag hinein leben völlig sorglos. Andererseits dann aber im zweiten Teil das dritte Reich, das die Sorgen von außen hereinbringt. Das hat mich schon in Grundzügen an den Simplicissimus Teutsch erinnert.
Leider habe ich ein Hörspiel gehört. Das ist zwar gut bearbeitet, aber hat eben einen völlig anderen Charakter, als ihn wohl Buch und Hörbuch hätten, da es interpretiert ist. ( )
  Wassilissa | Sep 28, 2018 |
With encomia from Paul Celan and Thomas Mann on the dust jacket, we can think The Island of Second Sight is either a great book or they were Thelen's friends. Both are somehow true.

How well did Thelen know all the writers, philosophers, historians, mystics, religious adepts, and others who fill these pages? The book is, after all, described as a novel, so the appearance of actual people, including the author, indicates the work occupies that peculiar space between fiction and fact, or memoir, where unreliability and truth hold sway. It's in this elusive, amorphous area that The Island of Second Sight invites us to wander for many many pages.

It can't be called great, I think, but Thelen's friends can be forgiven for liking it so much, as I liked it too. The passing suggestions of depression and other emotional difficulties the author suffers can be taken to explain the more obsessive sections, which seem far longer and more minutely detailed than seems warranted by the subject matter, and often involve Vigoleis, as the protagonist is known in the work, taking perhaps too much advantage of his auditors credulousness and the magnetism of a foreigner, even in Mallorca with its considerable expat population.

This population grows as Hitler rises to power and World War II approaches, and Vigo is at risk, as are other Germans living outside of their fatherland. The escape of the protagonist and his ethereal wife Beatrice who is constantly present yet largely unseen, from Mallorca provides a good deal of excitement in the latter parts of the book.

In the earlier parts excitement comes from the girlfriend of Beatrice's brother Zwingli, and from the extreme poverty Vigo and Beatrice endure when they're expelled from Zwingli's household by his in every way spectacular girlfriend.

The translation gives us a diction that veers wildly into the colloquial and abusive from the more usual elevated and detailed: I had to look up more words than in anything I've read recently. Donald O. White is reflecting the narratorial zigzags, we must think – a difficult task. Yet it's always a pleasure to read.

The Island of Second Sight is not a book one can read fast, but taking one's time allows the kaleidoscope of Mallorcan, or Mallorquin, as the author likes to say, life without money in the time of fascism, from which we are frequently transported by extended digressions worthy of Tristram Shandy, to appear in all its various dimensions, including the melancholy and pitiful.
  V.V.Harding | Apr 21, 2015 |
( The Island of Second Sight , by Albert Vigoleis Thelen - 1903-1989)

In the seven months or so I have been a member of GR, I have run across a good number of books I would otherwise never have heard about. But I thought I had a fairly decent idea of 20th century German literature; I was not expecting a big surprise from that corner. However, in the Buried Book Club, moderated by the most dashing, but punctuationally challenged Nathan "N.R." Gaddis (all praise be to Him), I ran across a mention of a great work of German literature from the early 1950's I had never even heard a whisper of before. No way! That's my revier! With likes to Jonathan and Rod, whose reviews convinced me, I sought far and wide for the book in German und bin fündig geworden. With glowing recommendations by two of my favorite authors, Thomas Mann and Paul Celan, urging me on, I dived into the 915 thin pages with densely set, small type and started swimming for my life. Wow! And again wow! Thelen lifted himself into my little pantheon of German stylists.

Though the book is based upon his own experiences, Thelen holds the story at a certain distance by telling the story about Vigoleis, his stand in, who is often, but certainly not always, indistinguishable from the author. Thelen plays around with this sometimes present, sometimes absent ironic distance. Indeed, das zweite Gesicht has two meanings in German: "second sight" and "second face", and both meanings are played upon alternately throughout the book. Vigoleis is Thelen's second face. And Vigoleis/Thelen sometimes has second sight.

Already the title warns that Thelen is going to use one of the pleasures of literature which is least amenable to translation - the pun. These range from simple little joys like

Die Eifersucht ist eine Leidenschaft, die mit Eifer sucht, was Leiden schafft.

to the deeper investigations into the wonders of German compound words strewn throughout the text. Thelen, whose bedside books always included the great dictionary composed by the Grimm brothers (yes, those Grimm brothers) - still known as the richest mine in the German language - loved words perhaps even more than he did his beloved Beatrice. Along with the German language, whose riches he systematically mined for 30 years before he wrote his masterpiece, he was fluent in Dutch, French, English, Spanish and Portuguese (that I know of for certain). And he indulged himself in this love to the fullest in this book.

And digression? Sterne has nothing on Thelen! And Thelen, who constantly stands back from the story and makes comments about the events, characters, his mode of writing about them (yes, standard postmodern gadgets; but remember that this book was published in 1953), addresses his digressions and calls them his "cactus style", not merely because there are so many bifurcations in the text, but also because "eyes appear at unexpected places". Why write 10 words when it can be said with 100, no, 200, 500? The words whir around themselves faster and faster, generating more words; and then, the vast mass falls to the ground and Thelen starts stirring the pot elsewhere... The style is alternately exhilarating and exhausting.

I'm not even going to try to give an overview of the hundreds of stories and substories and subsubstories Thelen recounts with glee. Not all are of equal interest, of course, but if you find one story dragging, just wait for a page or two, because three more are on their way. Suffice it to say that the narrative mainly takes place on the island of Mallorca during the 1930's, but it really runs from early in Thelen's childhood to just before he finishes the book. And it is stuffed with hundreds of colorful characters, each more memorable than the last.

Today's postmodern literati should read this book and note how it is so very full of life and humor, and not a sign of our poor age's authors' depression and bitterness. Please take an example.

Addendum 1
In the German edition I read there is a 25 page Afterword by Jürgen Pütz relating much interesting information about Thelen the person, Thelen the author and the reception of Thelen's writings in Germany. Here is a brief selection.

Born in the worker class, Thelen's early inclination to read and write were tolerated but not encouraged by his family. He started a few apprenticeships, visited a Fachhochschule for textiles, and studied briefly at university. He worked for a while. Finally, in 1931 he changed his name - adding Vigoleis - and left for Amsterdam, where he barely kept his head above water by writing the occasional article for periodicals and translating from Dutch to German (and vice versa ). He had already met Beatrice, the love of his life, in Cologne, and they were inseparable for the next 61 years.

The major incidents related in Insel actually occurred - the (false) emergency call to Mallorca by Beatrice's irresponsible brother, Zwingli; the dispensing of all of their funds to help Zwingli; the years of living as paupers on Mallorca; the fascists' hunt for their lives during the Spanish Civil War. They escaped to Switzerland, then Portugal, where they were taken in by the writer and mystic Teixeira de Pascoaes, whose books Thelen subsequently translated into German. They were in Portugal from 1939 till 1947, when they returned to Amsterdam and continued barely getting by with translations and belle-lettristic articles.

Pütz recounts how the idea to write Insel arose (not surprisingly, Thelen was a marvelous storyteller in company, and some of his friends urged him again and again to write them up). One such friend was a Dutch publisher, who stated his willingness to publish the book in German in the Netherlands. (Initially he was going to publish a Dutch translation of Thelen's book, but deadline constraints caused him to publish the original.) Ultimately, a German Verlag published the book simultaneously in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Thelen keeps writing and writing as his cactus style asserts itself; he did not plan to write a thousand page monstrosity (his book contract gave him less than a year to write it; the deadline kept getting postponed and the publishers upset).

The book appeared in November, 1953. It was well received in the press by such influential writers as Siegfried Lenz and Maarten 't Hart (Celan's praise was in a letter to his wife; I don't know where the praise from Mann appeared). But the literary opinion makers in Germany at that time were the people in the Gruppe 47 , led by Hans Werner Richter. Twice a year these people would get together and young authors would read from their new works. Thumbs up, thumbs down. For Thelen it was thumbs down, because at that moment Richter wanted to "strip the underbrush out of the German language". It was exactly the wrong moment for Thelen to come with his wonderfully rich prose! By 1958 the attitude of Gruppe 47 had completely changed; when Grass read from his Blechtrommel , a similarly rich fountaining of language, they awarded him their prestigious prize... It also didn't help that Insel was full of "whore stories" in 1953. The police in Düsseldorf initiated an investigation for obscenity which was ultimately laid on ice.

But there was enough encouragement for Thelen to write another long (and, according to Pütz, comparably excellent) book, Der schwarze Herr Bahssetup , set in the Netherlands, which appeared in 1956. The 700 page work was blasted as "disappointing" by the German critics. (I've located a used copy in Germany and am anxious for its arrival.) After that experience the sensitive Thelen wrote only poems and the occasional story. I review one of them here:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Thelen and Beatrice lived for many years in Switzerland and only returned to Germany in 1986, after the German government awarded him the Bundesverdienstkreuz.

Before Die Insel des zweiten Gesichts appeared in 1953, when he was 50 years old, Thelen had published only some poems and translations of other author's works. He had written masses and masses of manuscripts but had lost or burnt most of them. Who knows what wonders we have missed because of Thelen's many misfortunes?

Addendum 2
Well, after the effort I made to transmit some of the information in the Afterword of the German edition to the non-German readers was so well received (I even lost a "like"), I think I'll not make the further effort to compare White's translation with the original. I'm sure it's wonderful. ( )
3 rösta jonalb | Sep 22, 2013 |
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» Lägg till fler författare

Författarens namnRollTyp av författareVerk?Status
Thelen, Albert Vigoleisprimär författarealla utgåvorbekräftat
Boesten, WilÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Houët, LouisBerättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Pütz, JürgenEfterordmedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
White, Donald O.Översättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat

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Rondom was de grauwe sluier van de nacht opgetrokken toen we het achterdek betraden, onuitgeslapen, als geradbraakt, licht huiverend in de ochtendbries die de kim schoonveegde en ons al spoedig het schouwspel bood van de dichterbij komende steile kust van Mallorca
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An English-language release of a German award-winner originally published in 1953 traces the largely autobiographical experiences of inventor Vigoleis, who with his wife scrapes out an existence in 1930s Mallorca and befriends literary figures and Jewish neighbors before making Nazi enemies and plotting a daring escape during the Spanish Civil War.

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