The Dog King

The Dog King is a 1995 novel by the Austrian writer Christoph Ransmayr. Its original title is Morbus Kitahara. A work of alternative history, it is set in Central Europe after World War II and the implementation of the Morgenthau Plan, which has deindustrialized the region and created a ruthless post-apocalyptic-esque society. The main character is the son of a blacksmith who becomes the bodyguard of the only man in the area who owns a car.

The Dog King
AuthorChristoph Ransmayr
Original titleMorbus Kitahara
TranslatorJohn E. Woods
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
PublisherS. Fischer Verlag
Publication date
1995
Published in English
1997
Pages448
ISBN978-3-10-062908-1

An English translation by John E. Woods was published in 1997. The book received the 1996 Aristeion Prize.[1]

Reception

Curt Fields wrote in the Chicago Tribune: "The themes are grand, but the writing is far from pompous. Ransmayr's story (and John E. Woods' translation from the original German) is elegant, incisive and never labored."[2] In The New York Times, Gabriele Annan wrote about the book's use of allegory: "Whatever it symbolizes, the narrative is wildly arbitrary; but there is something so powerful, committed and solemn about Ransmayr's tone that it seems like a command to interpret his message". The critic continued: "This can have the opposite effect, of course, and Ransmayr has affectations that can be irritating. All the same, he is a marvelous writer, though, unlike most novelists, he writes more about sensations than feelings."[3] Publishers Weekly wrote: "Ably translated by Woods, this novel paints a convincing postapocalyptic world sent back into a nearly pre-civilized state. But Ransmayr (The Terrors of Ice and Darkness), though clearly probing the question of how Germany is to view itself in the wake of the Holocaust and WWII, never pulls his story out of his dark, expressionist atmospherics into the clear light of an answer."[4]

gollark: It often turns out to be useful and applicable in some silly way even when nobody expected it to be.
gollark: It would probably be necessary to fix the thing where it sometimes teleports you into walls, and you take damage until you somehow fall out.
gollark: I like the Ender IO (Minecraft mod) staff of traveling (short-range personal teleporter), so either that or a really really good computer (for purposes).
gollark: It might be interesting to consider what the graph of the connections would look like. Depending on how far apart habitats are in the network, there could still be a lot of variation between them.
gollark: I mean that you could enclose an area with protected chunks containing impassable-without-breaking-them walls.

References

  1. French, Yvonne; Lamolinara, Guy (1998). "New Literature from Europe". Library of Congress Information Bulletin. Library of Congress. 57 (5). Retrieved 2017-03-17.
  2. Fields, Curt (1997-07-28). "Words Of Praise Don't Do 'Dog King' Justice". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
  3. Annan, Gabriele (1997-06-22). "Deindustrializing the Nazis". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
  4. "Fiction Book Review: The Dog King by Christoph Ransmayr". Publishers Weekly. 1997-04-28. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
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