Vom Waisenkind zum Millionär - wie konnte das so schiefgehen?
Peter Holtz will das Glück für alle. Schon als Kind praktiziert er die Abschaffung des Geldes, erfindet den Punk aus dem Geist des Arbeiterliedes und bekehrt sich zum Christentum. Als CDU-Mitglied (Ost) kämpft er für eine christlich-kommunistische Demokratie. Doch er wundert sich: Der Lauf der Welt widerspricht aller Logik. Seine Selbstlosigkeit belohnt die Marktwirtschaft mit Reichtum. Hat er sich für das Falsche eingesetzt? Oder für das Richtige, aber auf dem falschen Weg? Und vor allem: Wie wird er das Geld mit Anstand wieder los? Peter Holtz nimmt die Verheißungen des Kapitalismus beim Wort. Mit Witz und Poesie lässt Ingo Schulze eine Figur erstehen, wie es sie noch nicht gab, wie wir sie aber heute brauchen: in Zeiten, in denen die Welt sich auf den Kopf stellt.
Ingo Schulze is a German writer born in Dresden in former East Germany. He studied classical philology at the University of Jena for five years, and, until the German reunification, was an assistant director (dramatic arts advisor) at the State Theatre in Altenburg 45 km south of Leipzig for two years.
After oversleeping the events of the night of November 9 1989, Schultze started a newspaper with friends. He was encouraged to write. Schultze spent six months in St Petersburg which became the basis for his debut collection of short stories 33 Moments of Happiness (1995). He has lived in Berlin since the mid 1990s.
Schulze has won a number of awards for his novels and stories, which have been translated into twenty languages, among them into English by John E. Woods.
Romanzo picaresco, lo definiscono l'editore e certe recensioni. Sarà.
Alla mia seconda lettura di Schulze devo di nuovo constatare un gelo interiore della scrittura che me lo rende respingente e alieno. Che poi l'ambientazione tra Berlino e Dresda prima e dopo la caduta del Muro avrebbe dovuto affascinarmi, invece niente, il protagonista buono, intelligente e un po' coglione, il suo idealismo assoluto, le sue giravolte da ipercomunista a ipercapitalista a gallerista che in una performance brucia denaro, ricavandone altro denaro, non mi cattura, come un po' in tutti i romanzi dove l'ideologia prevale.
Peter Holtz est le parfait représentant de l’Allemagne communiste , la RDA . Orphelin , il arrive toujours à tirer son épingle du jeu , prenant tout à la lettre au grand dam de ceux qu’il croise . Puis vient la réunification, ou le jeune homme confiant , attend les allemands de l’Est , persuadés qu’ils vont être nombreux à vouloir venir dans le paradis communiste. Mais ne nous en faisons pas pour lui , il va garder sa nature optimiste , la nouvelle situation lui sera toujours aussi favorable . Candide par excellence pour toujours . Le communisme n’a pas vécu , rattrapé par la société de consommation pour tous , beaucoup de désillusions , de pertes de sens , de nostalgiques de cette société où tout le monde avait un travail , certes souvent peu valorisant mais travail tout de même , où l’immobilier était abordable , en contrepartie il y a eu le spectre de la Stasi comme dans le très beau film , La vie des autres . C’est tout ça que nous rappelle ce roman de façon déjantée .
this book only got 2 stars instead of 1 bc while I REALLY didn't enjoy this book it also didn't have anything too horrible in it. Anyway, it took me a grand total of 9 months to finish it and now I'm finally done. The main character was infuriating, there was no plot, and the story was barely structured. I might have slightly enjoyed it if it was 200 pages or so, but almost 600 was definitely way too much.
Unterhaltsames Buch im Stile des Schelmenromans. Gut geschrieben, sehr kurzweilig, wenn auch nicht so lustig, wie oft angepriesen. Es ist aber ein schönes Buch, um diese 24 Jahre deutsche Geschichte erneut und aus einer anderen Perspektive zu erleben.
I really don't understand why male authors always need to bring in detailed genital descriptions when it had nothing to do with the story. Otherwise, a very interesting book to read.
Ingo Schulze, Peter Holtz: I have only just started. The book is an easy read with short chapters and witty. However, as I progress I am getting the feeling that behind the apparent „naivity“ of the main character who conforms letter by letter to official educational GDR mantras lies the intention to present GDR ideology as the better one, finally destroyed by evil capitalism. „Evil capitalism“ sneeks into Peter‘s idyllic world in the form of bad mannered youths dressed in western clothes and the old, now dispossessed elite, some of whom are afflicted with a „dicke Nase“ (p. 58). Unfortunately the book got more dreary the further I read on; I had to force myself to finish it. Basicly just another Ossi whine story. Not particularly funny once you get the drift. Ingo Schulze must have grasped the rules of capitalism very well in order to get this oevre on the best seller list. Thankfully there was only one more antisemitic trope I became aware of.