The playwright and novelist Thomas Bernhard was one of the most widely
translated and admired writers of his generation, winner of the three
most coveted literary prizes in Germany. Gargoyles, one of his
earliest novels, is a singular, surreal study of the nature of humanity.
One morning a doctor and his son set out on daily rounds through the
grim mountainous Austrian countryside. They observe the colorful
characters they encounter--from an innkeeper whose wife has been
murdered to a crippled musical prodigy kept in a cage--coping with
physical misery, madness, and the brutality of the austere landscape.
The parade of human grotesques culminates in a hundred-page monologue by
an eccentric, paranoid prince, a relentlessly flowing cascade of words
that is classic Bernhard.