Agnes
AuthorPeter Stamm
LanguageGerman
PublisherArche Verlag
Publication date
August 1, 1998
Published in English
2000
Media typePrint
Pages152 pages
ISBN978-3-7160-2245-0

Agnes is a 1998 German novel by Peter Stamm and was considered to be his literary debut.[1] The book was first published in German on August 1, 1998, through Arche Verlag and follows a romance between a nameless older man and Agnes, a young woman that is almost half his age.[2][3] Of the book, Stamm commented that he saw the book's landscape and climate as an important way of setting the tone for the novel and its characters.[4]

The book has been adapted into a radio play and in 2012, Agnes was adapted into a stage play by Christian Papke.[5][6]

Synopsis

The book takes place in Chicago and is told through the eyes of a narrator whose name is never given and begins with him announcing that Agnes is dead. He then recalls how he had first met Agnes at the Chicago Public Library in April, nine months prior to the novel's beginning. The two hit it off and eventually have sex, with Agnes telling him that it is her first time. Agnes and the narrator go through a series of everyday events, eventually culminating in her getting pregnant. He doesn't want the baby and suggests an abortion, much to Agnes's dismay. She leaves him and he's left heartbroken. The two eventually reunite after she grows ill and miscarries, but the loss takes an irreversible toll on their relationship. But one of the main themes in the novel is the story that Agnes wants the narrator to write. He starts off by writing their story so far: how they met, how they fell in love and so on. But when he reaches the present he keeps on writing. He decides what Agnes should wear, what they should eat and even what they should say. Agnes plays along at first, obeying everything that the narrator writes in 'their story'. But when Agnes tells the narrator that she's pregnant the reality and the narrator's story start to drift apart. The narrator actually tries to 'fix reality' in his writing. This ultimately leads to the end of the relationship, after which the narrator seems to have a mental breakdown while it's completely unclear what happens to Agnes.[7]

Awards

References

  1. Harris, Nigel; Sayner, Joanne (2008). The Text and Its Context: Studies in Modern German Literature and Society. Peter Lang. pp. 263–264. ISBN 978-3-03910-928-9.
  2. Komorowsk, Dariusz (2008). Jenseits von Frisch und Dürrenmatt: Raumgestaltung in der gegenwärtigen. Königshausen & Neumann. pp. 95–105. ISBN 978-3-8260-3913-3.
  3. Schmid, Birgit (2004). Die literarische Identität des Drehbuchs: Untersucht am Fallbeispiel "Agnes. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-03910-246-4.
  4. Studer, Patrick; Egger, Sabine (2007). From the Margins to the Centre. Peter Lang. pp. 65, 67. ISBN 978-3-03910-716-2.
  5. "Agnes: nach dem Roman von Peter Stamm". Staats Theater. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  6. "Der Schweizer Schriftsteller Peter Stamm ist eine Woche lang in der Stadt". SWP. Archived from the original on July 5, 2013. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  7. Vollmer, Hartmut (2008). ""Glück malt man mit Punkten, Unglück mit Strichen": Peter Stamms Roman Agnes". Monatshefte. 100 (2): 266–281. doi:10.1353/mon.0.0026.
  8. Steinwendtner, Brita; Holl, Hildemar (2000). 30 Jahre Rauriser Literaturtage. Kulturverein "Forum Rauris". p. 136.
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