
A Sabbatical In Leipzig
Description
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Michael, a retired engineer, has lived away from Ireland for most of his life and now resides alone in Bilbao after the death of his girlfriend, Catherine. Each day he listens to two versions of the same piece of music before walking the same route to visit Richard Serra's enormous permanent installation, The Matter of Time, in the Guggenheim Museum. Over the course of 45 minutes before he leaves his apartment, Michael reflects on past projects and how they have endured, the landscape of his adolescence, and his relationship with Catherine, which acts as the marker by which he judges the passing of time.
Over the course of the narrative, certain fascinations crop up: electricity, porcelain, the bogland of his youth, a short story by Robert Walser, and a five-year period of prolonged mental agitation spent in Leipzig with Catherine. This 'sabbatical', caused by the stress of his job and the suicide of a former colleague, splits his career as an engineer into two distinct parts.
A Sabbatical in Leipzig is intensely realistic, mapped out like Michael's intricate drawings. With a clear voice and precise, structured thoughts, we are brought from an empty landscape to envision the creation of structures in cities across Europe, from London to Leipzig and Bilbao. This narrator has left the void of his world in rural Ireland to build new environments elsewhere, yet remains connected to his homeland. Duncan's second novel stands alone as a substantial and compelling work of literary fiction.
Reviews / Votes
A book such as W.G. Sebald might have written, had he been an Irish Engineer. In precise and penetrating prose, this novel probes memory and absence, and offers a vivid evocation of how love and trouble, between them, can support a life and frame a world. A quietly compelling novel from a writer of real daring and poise.' -- Vona Groarke A reflective, beautifully paced novel. -- Sarah Gilmartin A Sabbatical in Leipzig is by turn poetic and forensic, exuberant and melancholy. At all times, it is an entirely riveting, deeply felt musing on intimacy, loneliness and the nature of perception itself. -- Sue Rainsford A Sabbatical in Leipzig is an entrancing read, one laced with despair, regret and tranquillity. Even after one finishes the final page, its concluding moments will leave one ruminating for a while afterward. It will be hard to forget this examination of time. -- Adam Matthews * RTE * 'If more men thought and wrote as tenderly and honestly, we'd have stronger, sturdier novels and fewer garish monuments to consumerism' - IRISH INDEPENDENT 'Spare and meticulous prose' - IRISH TIMES 'Precise and penetrating ... A quietly compelling novel from a writer of real daring and poise.'-VONA GROARKE 'An entirely riveting, deeply felt musing on intimacy, loneliness and the nature of perception itself.'-SUE RAINSFORD 'If more men thought and wrote as tenderly and honestly, we'd have stronger, sturdier novels and fewer garish monuments to consumerism' - IRISH INDEPENDENT 'Spare and meticulous prose' - IRISH TIMES You move through this book, as though at a contemporary art exhibition ... It is slow and affecting and really quite beautiful.Niamh Donnelly, Irish Times Duncan's analytical prose and oblique approach to human relationships is both a relief and a recalibration of staid literary conventions we take for granted ... haunting and devastating
Dublin Review of Books A haunted and haunting essay on loneliness ... lingers long after the last few harrowing pages.
Anne Cunningham shades of Beckett [and] calls to mind WG Sebald ... conjuring a deep and strange sense of stillness that hints at a discomfiting truth: this is a material world and we are merely passing through it.
Houman Barekat, The Sunday Times
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