Swiss Literatures

Documentation Swiss literatures

In Cooperation with the platform swissliterature.ch.

 

Swiss Literatures print this book tip

A l’ur dal di

(Am Rande des Tages)

Bezzola, Clo Duri (At Day’s Edge)

Rating

rate this book:

******

enlarge image

[ book tip by Literatur Schweiz ] «A l’ur dal di» (At Day’s Edge) is a collection of short prose pieces which Clo Duri Bezzola composed in Vallader (Rhaeto-Romanic). The 38 stories are self-contained and describe the everyday life of the narrator. With an ever-critical point of view he comments diary-like on what provokes his thoughts, surprises or aggrieves him, and on what makes him suffer.
As a teacher he puts himself on equal footing with his students: «I tell them that middle school is like secondary school, just with a different goal, My students don’t believe me, and I try to understand them.» While mowing the lawn his neighbour makes him livid with his little motor. «Wrrng, wrrng, the entire time!» As a father he wishes to relearn to dream just like his son does and is aware «that my fantasy cannot keep up with yours.»
And so «At Day’s Edge» gathers short texts from the sharp and entertaining pen of a sensitive-critical mind, who jots down all those things that are on the tip of his tongue. Always from the viewpoint of an alert observer – in Bezzola’s expressive and sometimes ironic style.

(Bettina Vital, trans. by Simon Froehling)

[ Favourite quote ] «Meis cheu es svessa üna balla da savun, vöda e ligera. Ella as stacha dal culöz, s’alvainta vers la fanestra, penetrescha il vaider, as sfraidischa, dvainta üna nüvla chi’s giovainta cul vent sü i’l univers staili, dvainta ün guot, ün granè da tampesta, challa e crouda per terra cun fracasch.»

[ book info ] Bezzola, Clo Duri: A l’ur dal di . (Am Rande des Tages). (original language: Rumantsch) At Day’s Edge. Ediziun Il Chardun, Zernez, 1984 .


This book is ...

Genre: narrative prose
Languages (book tip): English, German


More to do ...


Send this book tip to a friend




Comments





If you can't read the word, click here