Steglitz is a part of Berlin I always enjoy spending time exploring. Caught between the equally middle-class Charlottenburg and the much fancier Zehlendorf, it breathes bourgeoisie: modernist architecture, shopping avenue, large busy streets, better dressed people compared to other parts of the city.
In Steglitz Kafka spent his last months, between 1923 and 1924, together with Dora Diamant, before being hospitalized in a sanatorium.
Steglitz, where the action of the homonymous novel by French-born, Berlin based Inès Bayard takes place, is a place of routine, night secrets and delusion. Leni Müller, the wife of a successful architect, Ivan, recently assigned a project in Prora, the former Nazi summer resort in the island of Rügen, is a person of many habits. Not talking too much, walking her routines every day, a dedicated quiet housewife.
But, in a Kafkian vein, things start happening and the quiet Leni is violently pushed out of her mental comfort zone. She will end up almost homeless, working in pub in exchange of accommodation, leaving her husband and returning in her marital home as a complete alienated stranger.
I may confess the book took a turn I didn´t expect it, as I was expecting a very bourgeois novel. The challenge of surprise accepted, I felt however that the actual timeline the action is taking part is too long, compared to the intensity of the facts and episodes accounted for.
I had access to the book in the German version, translated from French by Theresa Benkert.
The cover, as many books published in Germany, is an excellent visual interpretation of the book.
Rating: 3.5 stars

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