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128 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2016
"the love of animals is the one true love in which one is never disappointed"imagine if lászló krasznahorkai wrote a single novella-length sentence about a failed, depressed philosophy professor who spends one morning in a german bar recounting the story, to one demonstrably uninterested barkeep, of his trip to spain, the result of an invitation to write a "new chapter" about the extremadura region, which, instead, turns into a compulsion to track down and discover the facts behind the death of the area's last remaining wolf (or wolves), a fated loss internalized by the professor and conveyed in all its dark, existential beauty; but you need not imagine too hard, as the last wolf (el último lobo) is just that, the slim, potent new work by the great hungarian master himself.
for how could he describe what so weighed him down, how could he explain how long ago he had given up the idea of thought, the point at which he first understood the way things were and knew that any sense we had of existence was merely a reminder of the incomprehensible futility of existence, a futility that would repeat itself ad infinitum, to the end of time and that, no, it wasn't a matter of chance and its extraordinary, inexhaustible, triumphant, unconquerable power working to bring matters to birth or annihilation, but rather the matter of a shadowy demonic purpose, something embedded deep in the heart of things, in the texture of the relationship between things, the stench of whose purpose filled every atom, that it was a curse, a form of damnation, that the world was the product of scorn, and god help the sanity of those who called themselves thinkers*rendered from the hungarian by george szirtes (poet, and translator of márai, kosztolányi, et al.)
and whereas our techniques—having realized in the wake of our sorry experiences that we were not questing heroes but merely dumb victims of the thinking mind—were based on paraphiliac fulfillment, unbridled pursuit of pleasure, the ceaseless apocatastasis of an eden missing from primal imagination, and took refuge in transgression, herman's deliberately paltry means were called into being by hubris, a hubris that believed in the invincibility of weakness.*translated from the hungarian by john bakti (author, translator, and kilimologist[!])
"… the short sentence is artificial – we use almost never short sentences, we make pause, or we hold on a part of a sentence end … but this characteristic, very classical, short sentence – at the end with a dot – this is artificial, this is only a custom, this is perhaps helpful for the reader, but for only one reason, that the readers in the last few thousand years have learned that a short sentence is easier to understand, this is also a custom, but if you think, you almost never use short sentences, if you listen …"