"I was on my way to look for a life of my own."
A brilliant, brutally honest autobiographical novel, long out of print, from one of the great artistic polymaths of the 20th century.
This is a Sebaldian account of the narrator's attempt to break free of a repressive upper-middle-class upbringing and make his way as an artist and individual, written in a single incantatory paragraph.
Leavetaking is the story of an upper-middle-class childhood and adolescence in Berlin between the wars. In the course of the book, Weiss plumbs the depths of family life: there is the early death of his beloved sister Margit, the difficult relationship with his parents, the fantasies of adolescence and youth, all set in the midst of an increasing anti-Semitism, which forces the Weiss family to move again and again, a peripatetic existence that only intensifies the narrator's growing restlessness.
The young narrator is largely oblivious to world events and focused instead on becoming an artist, an ambition frustrated generally by his milieu and specifically by his mother, who, herself a former actress, destroys his paintings during one of the family's moves. In the end, he turns to an older mentor, Harry Haller, a fictionalized portrait of Hermann Hesse, who encouraged and supported Weiss, and with Haller's example before him, the narrator takes his first steps towards a truly independent life. Intensely lyrical, written with great imaginative power, Leavetaking is a vivid evocation of a world that has disappeared and of the narrator's developing consciousness.
THE NEVERSINK LIBRARY champions books from around the world that have been overlooked, underappreciated, looked askance at, or foolishly ignored. They are issued in handsome, well-designed editions at reasonable prices in hopes of their passing from one reader to another—and further enriching our culture.
“This is the most under-covered, undervalued release of 2014."
—Flavorwire, 50 Best Independent Fiction and Poetry Books of 2014
“[Weiss] remains among the most important postwar German authors no one’s read."
—Slate, Overlooked Books of 2014
“A moving testimonial to a young man’s strivings for personal freedom... This poetically concise yet propulsive work...paints a portrait of a young artist in his state of becoming."
—3:AM Magazine
“One of the finest, strangest coming-of-age novels you’ve never heard of.”
—Barnes & Noble Review
“A remarkable writer... must be counted among the most important European authors of the 20th century."
—The Complete Review
“A dynamic work, a re-creation and exorcism of the past rather than a recollection of it in tranquility...Wholly succeeds in fusing a new realism with a new imaginative vision."
—Times Literary Supplement