Bodo Kirchhoff
Verlangen und Melancholie
[Longing and melancholy]

Frankfurter Verlagsanstalt
Frankfurt am Main 2014
ISBN 9783627002091
448 Pages
Publisher’s contact details
Frankfurter Verlagsanstalt
Frankfurt am Main 2014
ISBN 9783627002091
448 Pages
Publisher’s contact details
Translated by Zaia Alexander
By Kristina Maidt-Zinke
Kristina Maidt-Zinke is a book and music critic at the Süddeutsche Zeitung and also writes reviews for Die Zeit.
Hinrich, spelled without the usual “e,” makes for a more elegant version of the name Heinrich.
One sunny day in May, Hinrich receives a letter with a black border in his mailbox. Who could have died? He doesn’t dare open the envelope. He has been living alone ever since his wife was killed falling from a 43 meter high building nine years earlier. His years working as a cultural correspondent for a major newspaper in Frankfurter are also a thing of the past. Now his days are filled with memories of Irene, the beloved mother of his daughter Naomi, and a translator of sophisticated Italian literature. He recalls their trip to Italy one summer, the excursion to Pompeii, where they stood for hours in front of the famous frescoes of the Villa dei Misteri trying to unravel their secret. He remembers their love of cinema; how enamored they were of the moody black and white images, but also how they loved to be entertained. But the real question concerns what really happened nine years ago, before the fall. And what is contained in this letter with the black border? A trip to Warsaw provides a few explanations both about his life with Irene as well as with an ex-lover, and these answers turn everything he believed upside down.
Bodo Kirchhoff ‘s most recent major work, “Verlangen und Melancholie” [Longing and melancholy] is a subtly gripping novel that takes its readers on a quest for clues, one in which the hero slowly but inexorably uncovers the big question of “why,” and allows him to discover the truth behind his wife’s death. Bodo Kirchhoff also tells us about a kind of aging process in which wishes never age, of eternally youthful desire, and of a melancholy that ultimately is healing.
(Text: Frankfurter Verlagsanstalt)