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331 pages, Paperback
First published October 10, 2023
All the buildings in Vienna are gray now, except for a few that are dark brown. The whole city seems covered with dirt. In winter the sky is stony and low, in summer yellowishly damp. Even that was different once. If you’re old enough, you know that in this city of garbage, coal smoke, and dog shit, even the weather is no longer what it was.
“Metropolis is the best film ever made,” said Pabst.
“I know,” said Lang.
And now, he thought, lying on the deck chair and blowing gray smoke into the gray sky while the sea rocked him, Thea von Harbou was with the Nazis, and Lang, long divorced from her, was on his way to America. It was possible that their two ships would pass in the darkness of night, heading in opposite directions. Lang wouldn’t make any of the mistakes he had made.
People who had never been to Spain, or Mexico or California, might have believed that this was what flamenco looked like. She jerked her hips stiffly, twirled her arms stiffly as if shooing away a fly, backed away stiffly, her face probably meant to express fear as she stared at Minetti with his guitar.
“What’s a Saint Vitus dance?” asks Jakob.
“Dancing like you’re possessed by the devil,” says Papa. “First people watch, then they join in. They can’t help themselves.”
“That could be seen as an allusion…”