One of the loveliest riddles of Austrian literature is finally available
in English translation: Gert Jonke's 1982 novel, Awakening to the Great
Sleep War, is an expedition through a world in constant nervous motion,
where reality is rapidly fraying--flags refuse to stick to their poles,
lids sidle off of their pots, tram tracks shake their stops away like
fleas, and books abandon libraries in droves. Our cicerone on this
journey through the possible (and impossible) is an "acoustical
decorator" by the name of Burgmüller--a poetical gentleman, the lover of
three women, able to communicate with birds, and at least as
philosophically minded as his author: "Everything has suddenly become so
transparent that one can't see through anything anymore." This
enormously comic--and equally melancholic--tale is perhaps Jonke's
masterwork.