The Diary of Kaspar Hauser


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About The Book

This intriguing gem of a book is a direct germinal expression of the authorís longstanding fascination with the figure of the Idiot in Western literature. Part notebook part ethical treatise part fantasized autobiography The Diary of Kaspar Hauser is a striking collection of forty or so haiku-like compositions diary entries imagined to have been penned by the idiot Kaspar Hauser and discovered by chance after his death by brutal murder among the papers of his patron Franz Paul Webern. (Franz is Kasparís interlocutor throughout the poems.) This hyperpoetic component of the book - inspired by Werner Herzogís masterful film - is sandwiched between two essays: the first an Introduction recounting the remarkable discovery and history of the fabled manuscript; the second comprising a one-page Epilogue (which details the death of Kaspar) along with a letter in the form of an Appendix by a fictional highly cultured Borges-like literary critic who converses with the eponymous Febbraro about his startling dreamlike find.The book has all the characteristics - concision of language fanciful flights of fiction and criticism in concentrated poetic form sparse elements of theatrical dialogue a fierce philosophical underpinning - to make for an ancient novelty of sorts: a daring book that surprises and forces us to rethink what we think we already know.
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