cover image A Whole Life

A Whole Life

Robert Seethaler, trans. from the German by Charlotte Collins. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $23 (160p) ISBN 978-0-374-28986-7

The life chronicled in Seethaler’s poignant novel is, at first glance, unremarkable: Andreas Egger begins and ends his life in an Alpine valley village, where he arrives after his mother’s death in 1902, and to which he returns in 1951, after years as a POW in Russia. Egger, however, contains multitudes: subjected to childhood beatings that leave him with a permanent limp, he stands up to his abusive uncle and goes on to become an expert cable-car company employee, as well as a devoted husband and father. But the mountainous land he loves—and through which, in his middle age, he leads groups of hiking tourists—is far from serene. The titanic forces of nature and politics determine Egger’s arduous course through the 20th century. Not always successfully, Seethaler seeks to avoid sentimentality. Readers will discover in his contained prose a vehicle for keen insight and observation: Egger, touched for the first time by his future wife, experiences “a very subtle pain... more profound than any [he] had encountered,” and later, watching the Moon landing with his neighbors in their new parish hall, he feels “mysteriously close and connected to the villagers down here on the darkened Earth.” Nearing his end, Egger “couldn’t remember where he had come from, and ultimately he didn’t know where he would go. But he could look back without regret... with a full-throated laugh and utter amazement.” (Sept.)