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“The new fascism puts on its friendliest smile, helps old people across the street and carries their heavy shopping bags up the stairs.”


 Wire, Lindisfarne. April 2021.

The Ditch by Herman Koch

Reading The Ditch bought to mind someone embarking on a dangerous tightrope walk. I wasn't sure about it at fits, and Koch wobble a few times early on, only to recover. Then we have some more wobbling and it really looked as if he'd fall, only to trick me again and finish the trick splendidly.

Koch has taken a huge risk in choosing to locate the entire story inside the mind of an extremely unlikable, egotistical and pompous politician. Deepening that risk is a real sense of paranoia and the emergence of some kind of mid-life crisis or mental breakdown.

Yet he pulls it off. Bravo! It's not the most pleasurable read as we meander trough the musings of such a prick, but my word he has impressed me with a virtuoso performance in pulling off that ending.

⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐

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