
From the author of the critically-acclaimed Austerlitz & Across the Land & Water comes. A Place in the Country, the much anticipated translation of one of W.G. Sebald's most brilliant works. When W. G. Sebald, the prize-winning author of Austerlitz, travelled to Manchester in 1966, he packed in his bags certain literary favourites which would remain central to him throughout the rest of his life & during the years when he was settled in Engl&. In A Place in the Country, he reflects on six of the figures who shaped him as a person & as a writer, from Jean-Jacques Rousseau to Jan Peter Tripp. Fusing biography & essay, & finding, as ever, inspiration in place
- as when he journeys to the Ile St. Pierre, the tiny, lonely Swiss island where Jean-Jacques Rousseau found solace & inspiration
- Sebald lovingly brings his subjects to life in his distinctive, inimitable voice. A Place in the Country is a window into the mind of this much loved & much missed writer. Praise for W.G. Sebald: A new kind of writing, combining fiction, memoir, travelogue, philosophy & much else besides...greatness in literature is still possible. (John Banville, Irish Times). When you read Sebald you are transported to another realm. Reading him is a truly sublime experience. (Literary Review). Is literary greatness still possible? One of the few answers available to English-Language readers is the work of W.G. Sebald. (Susan Sontag). W.G. Sebald was born in Wertach im Allgau, Germany in 1944. He studied German language & literature in Freiburg, Switzerland & Manchester. In 1966 he took up a position as an assistant lecturer at the University of Manchester, & settled permanently in England in 1970. He was Professor of European Literature at the University of East Anglia, & the author of Austerlitz; The Emmigrants, which won a series of major awards, including the Berlin Literature Prize, the Heinrich Boll Prize, the Heinrich Heine Prize & the Joseph Breitbach Prize.