Sleepless Jurek Sleepless Harcourt Brace FIRST First Edition, 2nd Printing. Not price-clipped. Published by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1979. Octavo. Hardcover. Book is very good with spotting to top of page ends. Dust jacket is very good with shelf/edgewear. 100% positive feedback. 30 day money back guarantee. NEXT DAY SHIPPING! Excellent customer service. Please email with any questions. All books packed carefully and ship with free delivery confirmation/tracking. All books come with free bookmarks. Ships from Sag Harbor, New York.Seller 348567 Literature We Buy Books! Collections - Libraries - Estates - Individual Titles. Message us if you have books to sell!
Jurek Becker (* vermutlich 30. September 1937 in Łódź, Polen als Jerzy Bekker geboren[1]; † 14. März 1997 in Sieseby, Schleswig-Holstein) war ein deutscher Schriftsteller, Drehbuchautor und DDR-Dissident.
Jurek Becker (probably September 30, 1937 – March 14, 1997) was a Polish-born German writer, film-author and GDR dissident. His most famous novel is Jacob the Liar, which has been made into two films. He lived in Łódź during World War II for about two years and survived the Holocaust.
A novel that indeed manifests itself as a quiet sadness.
A man of about 36 years feels a sudden pain in his chest. What seems like physical distress at first reveals itself as an existential suffering, a fear of not being oneself, and the inhibitions of unfreedom in Germany's East. This short piece tries to bring us along the protagonist's path, his journey, of discovering himself (at best). But the most that it could achieve is the old Conradian realization that one lives like one dreams -- alone.
Therein lies the power of the novel: What does it take to change something, or even just oneself? Can one achieve it even at all, can one perform the action necessary, can one tilt at windmills? -- For its attempt to convey the melancholy of such endeavors, it remains a great book.
"Ich habe getan, dachte er, als sei es nicht meine Sache, mich gegen Bevormundung und Ungerechtigkeiten aufzulehnen. Und das bedeutet: Ich habe mich nicht zuständig gefühlt für mich selbst."
Dürfte das erste Werk eines DDR-Schriftstellers über die DDR sein, das ich gelesen habe. Spannend.
Literature from the DDR is always interesting, and Becker's short novel is no exception. This book is sad, yet somehow gratifying. The steady courage and determination of Simrock, as he battles a cold and distant regime, makes us admire him. The result is a warm-hearted story, easy to like and admire.
2 1/2 sterne eher ging spannend los, hat mich dann irgendwann etwas verloren (irgendwann dachte ich nur noch: ist halt ein mann); zwischenzeitlich ganz interessante & nachvollziehbare gedankengänge;
sometimes you pick up a book you've never heard of written by someone you've never heard of and it's worth it. an above-average book but not exemplary. still, inoffensive and easy to read
Sleepless Days centres on the life of Karl Simrock, an East German teacher, who rejects all the values by which he has lived - job, the state, his wife and family. The course of his rebellion is subtle and Becker reflects this rebellion against the somnambulistic obedience of the people around him, with the exception of Antonia Kramm - a woman who breaks her silence and rails against the state apparatus. Sleepless Days has a Kafka-esque quality - a story of a man helpless against a bureaucracy that is more crushing than the pain in the chest, which the protagonist experiences at the beginning of the story.