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312 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2004
‘The world; the spirit,’ Dr Richarz enthused, ‘our philosophers have shown beyond doubt that they are identical and commensurate; that they are inherent within one another and stand in a necessary relation of indiscernible identity…’
‘Yes, Herr Doktor,’ I said patiently. ‘I am quite familiar with Hegel and Fichte and Schopenhauer. But I do sometimes wonder if there really is any more wisdom in them than in the tales of elves and fairies my grandmother used to tell me on her knee.’
Johannes Kreisler, a musician, is writing his auto-biography. But his pet cat Murr mixes up all the pages and writes his own life story on the reverse sheets. So the novel consists of two parallel narratives, Kreisler’s and Murr’s, intercutting randomly. It was one of Franz Kafka’s favourite novels; and Ringer could see why Schumann too was so impressed, given that the composer’s own divided self ultimately landed him in a lunatic asylum.
