"Hermann Burger was an artist who went the whole hog every time,
didn't conserve himself. He was a man with a big longing for happiness."
--Marcel Reich-Ranicki
Appearing in English for the very first time, Brenner is a
delightfully unusual novel full of dark humor tracing the childhood
memories of the book's eponymous narrator, a scion of an ancient cigar
dynasty.
Perpetually shrouded in a thick cloud of cigar smoke, Herman Arbogast
Brenner, scion of an old and famous cigar dynasty, has decided to kill
himself--but not until he has written down his forty-six years of life,
in a Proustian attempt to conjure the wounds, joys, and sensations of
his childhood in the rolling countryside of the Aargau region of
Switzerland.
Estranged from his wife and two children, he decides there is no point
in squirrelling away his fortune, so he buys himself a Ferrari 328 GTS,
and drives around sharing cigars with his few remaining friends.
In this roman à clef, writing and smoking become intertwined through the
act of remembering, as Brenner, a fallible, wounded, yet lovable
antihero, searches for epiphany, attempting to unearth memories just out
of reach-- the glimmer of a red toy car, the sound of a particular chord
played on the piano, the smell of the cigars themselves.
Brenner is the final work from Hermann Burger, who died by suicide in
1989. The book comes out just days before what would have been the
author's 80th birthday.