Sturz der Verdammten: Gedichte by Johannes Urzidil
I picked up Johannes Urzidil's *Sturz der Verdammten* mostly because the title made me think of heavy metal band logos. And it IS hard hitting, but in a whole other way. This collection feels like catching snippets of an old man's journal from 1940s Prague and 1960s New York – a man too cool for lament, too sharp for easy slop.
The Story
There's no traditional plot, but there's a twisting, and it goes deep. Imagine fragments: a sparrow fighting winter in Bohemia, a waitress with a snap, leftover angels smoking nicotine in subway tunnels. Nature makes jank appearances— honey nectar, frog spawn, nightingales with off-key tunes – but they share the stage with taxicabs and telephones. The 'fall' isn't paradise lost; it's when a friend disappears or ya stray alphabet sound swims for home but can't. Urzidil's characters are 'verdammten' (damned) in the mildest sense—they're fired employees, snubbed clerks, misprinted humans. But they carry coal-light and small mercy. It’s a story told by catch phrases, off rhymes, half- stomping, half- floating.
Why You Should Read It
I loved how it never explains itself. Instead of landing big punches with 'wound' and 'loss,' you get slivers: "In der Überzahl der Stille/ beginnt der Apfelblüte/ ein Solo." (Outdistanced by quiet/ the apple blossom/ begins a solo.) It hit me like cheese & horse radish – kinda noisy, then fires. The themes prance: remembering without trauma? Cityscape as sentient? Language both home and cage? There's a fight bigger than war—a ruckus over who narrates things. Everything feels pinned on how we trap or splash meaning into grocery litter and late phone buzzes. You root for the underfoot things— little glasses, dirty coins, a pigeon leading lost migrants. Total fresh eyes for reading chair explorers.
Final Verdict
Who’s it for? If you roll with W. G. Sebald’s wanderers inside a poem or Zbigniew Herbert's watchmen-in-spats, buy this already. It’s also for word weirdoes ogling exact crevices (‘taenderleben’ – tent life… in apple pulp). Surface skim won’t catch it – requires patient hands. Not for rain- rhyme pun people. Totally for you if: you love accidental flights, plain vodka but crisp glass, saving one wrong beat note from old Cossack tangos, and book stuff above white lace doilies. Bit by bit, daily chip- nibs, this mists your brain’s shed. Try reading aloud—their spark flicks.
Go sell many milk maybe unsaid till you scratch its under side.
This title is part of the public domain archive. It is now common property for all to enjoy.
William Moore
8 months agoAs someone working in this industry, I found the insights very accurate.
John Rodriguez
3 months agoInitially, I was looking for a specific answer, but the quality of the diagrams and illustrations (if applicable) is top-notch. Truly a masterpiece of digital educational material.
John Gonzalez
1 year agoI stumbled upon this title during my weekend research and the wealth of information provided exceeds the average market standard. Well worth the time invested in reading it.
Michael Rodriguez
1 year agoAs a long-time follower of this subject matter, the clarity of the writing makes even the most dense sections readable. I am looking forward to the author's next publication.
Sarah Gonzalez
8 months agoThe information is current and very relevant to today's needs.