Reviews

An Inventory of Losses by Judith Schalansky

caislekyle's review against another edition

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3.0

At times heartbreaking but mostly just interesting while you’re reading and out of thoughts when you aren’t.

philipn17's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

2.5

literarycrushes's review against another edition

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2.0

beautifully written but not for me - DNF

katellison's review against another edition

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4.0

formally eclectic and sonically stunning.

favorites include Caspian Tiger and Encyclopedia in the Wood

massive props to english translator Jackie Smith - i would love to get my hands on this in the original german.

sam_bizar_wilcox's review against another edition

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4.0

Physically gorgeous and conceptually arresting, Schalansky's An Inventory of Losses is one of the most delightful literary treats: a genre-less series of musings and writing that remind the reader of the power of language in the act of recollection, and the inevitability of forgetting. Though some of the essays/passages work less than others (and though the prose isn't always able to capture the magic of what, I think, the author intends) Schalansky's subjects are consistently charming, consistently poetic, as they are assembled in a rich catalog of nonexistence. The narrative that unfolds is one of an archivist on an ill-conceived mission for preservation, one as plagued by folly as it is by romance. At its core, however, An Inventory of Losses does what all good literature ought to do: it forces the reader to recognize truths that are inherent but challenging to acknowledge. Here, we direct our vision to ephemeral inevitability.

By flying so close to this truth - that all things will eventually disappear, that all things must pass - however, the book gives the reader not a morbid or melancholic glance at life and the world; rather, it opens our eyes to an almost limitless potentiality of how time can change things. As it directs our attention to the fleeting and gone, the book gives a greater sense of what it might entail to be infinite.

renbuecher's review against another edition

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reflective slow-paced

1.5

die Idee hinter dem Buch hätte so toll sein können, aber leider war, bis auf ein paar Ausnahmen, das Buch einfach nur langweilig

januaryreads's review against another edition

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I could not past the introduction by the auther

hannahanderson's review against another edition

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it was for school

sandysawmill's review against another edition

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3.0

Her writing is delicate, transportive, and informative, but I can only stand it in small doses-which is why it took me over a year to finish.

lilyherling's review against another edition

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2.0

A beautiful book that I unfortunately didn’t have the patience for