The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge: A Novel
by Rainer Maria Rilke
|
|
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge: A Novel.
discuss this book
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
lists with this book
This book is not in any lists. Go add it to a list.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 377)
bookshelves:
underrated
More like The LiveJournal of Rainer Maria Rilke. I loved this.
The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge is an experimental, surrealistic novel in episodes, and reading it is like finding a lost artifact. Our narrator is a young Danish nobleman, estranged from his family, disillusioned with the romance of being a starving artist in Paris, and searching for a symbolic story that fits his experience. Malte's journeys are lush and visual and delightfully weird, and we get to follow him throug...more
The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge is an experimental, surrealistic novel in episodes, and reading it is like finding a lost artifact. Our narrator is a young Danish nobleman, estranged from his family, disillusioned with the romance of being a starving artist in Paris, and searching for a symbolic story that fits his experience. Malte's journeys are lush and visual and delightfully weird, and we get to follow him throug...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in April, 2008
I read the version with an introduction written by William Gass and translation by Stephen Mitchell. Gass writes, "Rilke is not Malte, but Malte is Rilke." It is important to keep this in mind when wandering around the Paris streets with Malte, a young Danish nobleman who has left his family home in favor of the life of a romantic poet and who suffers from fits of remembrance. He also suffers from an acute anxiety caused in the search for the love that gives of itself. Although written...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
german,
literature
Many are familiar with his "Duino Elegies," and some colleges even require his "Letters to a Young Poet" in freshmen classes, but Rilke's only novel remains somewhat of a mystery. Much like other existential, man-about-town texts, in which not much happens but a character's obsession becomes fully lived (cf. Sartre and nausea, Lautréamont and evil, Miller and sex), Rilke's Malte is troubled by the question of death and transcendence, and that place where the veil of reality ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
fiction
Read in September, 2007
I've categorized this under fiction, but I'm not sure that's an entirely accurate designation. But whatevs.
Of Note:
The False Dmitry (also treated in Tsvetaeva's poem "Marina")
Gaspara Stampa (doesn't another poet refer to her, or is it just Rilke?)
I found that I was most interested in the telling of the familial ghost stories and least interested in the meditative, declamatory passages. The historical references were fun (at least the ones I had time to Google).
Also wor...more
Of Note:
The False Dmitry (also treated in Tsvetaeva's poem "Marina")
Gaspara Stampa (doesn't another poet refer to her, or is it just Rilke?)
I found that I was most interested in the telling of the familial ghost stories and least interested in the meditative, declamatory passages. The historical references were fun (at least the ones I had time to Google).
Also wor...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in February, 2008
I much prefer Rilke's letters and memoirs to his work of fiction, though Notebooks reads just like an autobiography. It isn't as coherent as his memoirs, nor as insightful and honest as his letters, however. I would recommend setting aside one evening to read this book in one sitting, because once you put it down I found it very difficult to go back to it. You never know where the story will take you: one minute you're examining an old blind man with a wheelbarrow, then you're contemplating real...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
recommends it for:
Dog lovers
Brigge seems to be journaling through some rage here. But a good kind of rage, the kind that somehow weaves childhood memories together with weird historical anecdotes with existential subtexts. There's some hefty reference to traditional French and German poets, and a few of the more famous nuns out there, but I think I was happiest when he kept it personal and wrote about his walks around Paris. Some might disagree with me, but I really think this book is about dogs. Rilke's dogs don't tro...more
Like this review?
yes
4 comments
bookshelves:
-classics-
Read in July, 2007
I was very hot and cold with this one - I absolutely loved parts of it, and other parts were ridiculously melodramatic and/or made little sense (which is why I gave it 3 stars instead of 4). I was suspicious that some of it might have been lost in translation. Some of the imagery is really great - I especially liked how he personifies death. The last few pages about the true meaning of the Prodigal Son story are very effective and moving.
It was definitely a worthwhile read, and I'd recomm...more
It was definitely a worthwhile read, and I'd recomm...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2006
"I am learning to see. I don't know why it is, but everything penetrates more deeply into me and does not stop at the place where until now it always used to finish. I have an inner self of which I was ignorant. Everything goes thither now. What happens there I do not know."
Truthfully there were some passages of this book that I found myself lost and the struggle tedious, but otherwise, some of the best pages I have ever read. One of few prose works from the poet Rainer Maria Rilke
Truthfully there were some passages of this book that I found myself lost and the struggle tedious, but otherwise, some of the best pages I have ever read. One of few prose works from the poet Rainer Maria Rilke
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
to-read
The woman sat up, frightened, she pulled out of herself, too quickly, too violently, so that her face was left in her two hands. I could see it lying there: Its hollow form. It cost me an indescribable effort to stay with those two hands, not to look at what had been torn out of them.
Oh, Rilke. You're such a poet.
I can't get the image of the torn face out of my...head.
Oh, Rilke. You're such a poet.
I can't get the image of the torn face out of my...head.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
recommends it for:
Lindsey
A fictionalized Rilke as a young man, dealing with issues of psychosis, genius and creativity. The blurring of 1) subjective impressions, fears, and memories with 2) the objective, narrative reality is constant throughout, such that, no reality exists outside of the head of our eloquent, troubled and fascinating protagonist. Great read for artists, architects, and any creative types.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in May, 2007
I'm still working on this one too, since I'm in school. But I'm near the end and have some time this weekend...
It's an attempt at giving figure to death and the German is very difficult, but it's a good way to connect to those I know through this existential novel; however, it's good Rilke continued writing poetry and this novel does not compare.
It's an attempt at giving figure to death and the German is very difficult, but it's a good way to connect to those I know through this existential novel; however, it's good Rilke continued writing poetry and this novel does not compare.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
Shomit, because he recommended it to me.
I learned that other people agree that lovers, married people, close friends (especially artists) need to get the hell away from each other for long periods of time to make the relationship work. Otherwise, this book was hard to read. Not even sure i finished it.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
currently-reading
"I marvel sometimes how readily I give up everything I expected for the reality, even when the reality is bad. My God, if any of it could be shared! But would it -be- then, would it -be-? No, it -is- only at the price of solitude."
-pg. 68
-pg. 68
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 1984
Beautiful, elegant, visionary miserablism. The one section where the narrator is walking down the street and imagining the various illnesses and torments of the passersby will remain with me forever until it is no longer with me.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
to-read
by author of Letters to a Young Poet which was sort of a classic in the development of my view of writing specifically and art generally. Receives lots of 5 star ratings on goodreads though no one seems to say why.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Rilke's poetry is amazing. This is a prose piece he wrote. I highly recommend his work as translated by Stephen Mitchell. His Collected Poems of Rainer Maria Rilke with Mitchell's translations are superb.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
favorites
Some of the most beautiful prose I have ever read. No other author (or poet) uses synecdochy as successfully as Rilke does in this novel.
Like this review?
yes
2 comments
bookshelves:
readalongtimeago
I loved the brilliant novel of this amazing poet. i read it in college when i was supposed to be reading other things.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
to-read
Read in June, 2008
I just can't get into it this time. I'll try it again in a few months.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
book data (includes all editions)
avg rating (all editions): 4.12 (287 ratings) avg rating (this edition): 4.32 (59 ratings) number of reviews: 24popular shelves
other editions
quote
"For the sake of a few lines one must see many cities, men and things. One must know the animals, one must feel how the birds fly and know the gesture with which the small flowers open in the morning. One must be able to think back to roads in unknown regions, to unexpected meetings and to partings which one had long seen coming; to days of childhood that still unexplained, to parents that one had to hurt when they brought one some joy and one did not grasp it (it was joy for someone else); to childhood illness that so strangely began with a number of profound and grave transformations, to days in rooms withdrawn and quiet and to mornings by the sea, to the sea itself, to seas, to nights of travel that rushed along on high and flew with all the stars-and it is not enough if one may think all of this. One must have memories of many nights of love, none of which was like the others, of the screams of women in labor, and of light, white, sleeping women in childbed, closing again. But one must also have been beside the dying, one must have sat beside the dead in the room with the open window and the fitful noises. And still it is not enough to have memories. One must be able to forget them when they are many, and one must have the great patience to wait until they come again. For it is not yet the memories themselves. Not until they have turned to blood within us, to glance, to gesture, nameless and no longer to be distinguished from ourselves-not until then can it happen that in a most rare hour the first word of a verse arises in their midst and goes forth from them."
more quotes »






















