[Salon Book Awards]

Alias Grace
By Margaret Atwood
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday

Cold Mountain
By Charles Frazier
Atlantic Monthly Press

Because They Wanted To
By Mary Gaitskill
Simon & Schuster

Mason & Dixon
By Thomas Pynchon
Henry Holt

The Reader
By Bernhard Schlink
Pantheon

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

How Proust Can Change Your Life
By Alain de Botton
Pantheon

The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
By Anne Fadiman
Farrar Straus & Giroux

Into Thin Air
By Jon Krakauer
Villard

Echoes of a Native Land
By Serge Schmemann
Knopf

Close to the Machine
By Ellen Ullman
City Lights Books

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Reader's choice awards
Your best books of 1997

Introduction
Salon's favorite books of the year

- - - - - - - - - - -

Sneak Peeks
Salon's daily book review sponsored by Borders Books and Music

Win a free Salon mousepad. Sign up for our newsletter.

Join the Books discussion in Table Talk.

- - - - - - - - - - -

P.D. James
The Salon Interview
(02/26/98)

- - - - - - - - - - -

SALON
home page

- - - - - - - - - - -

spacer

____| E X C E R P T |

___________the reader

Book cover



BY BERNHARD SCHLINK

TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN BY CAROL BROWN JANEWAY

FICTION

PANTHEON BOOKS

218 PAGES

______=====>



When I was fifteen, I got hepatitis. It started in the fall and lasted until spring. As the old year darkened and turned colder, I got weaker and weaker. Things didn't start to improve until the new year. January was warm, and my mother moved my bed out onto the balcony. I saw the sky, sun, clouds, and heard the voices of children playing in the courtyard. As dusk came one evening in February, there was the sound of a blackbird singing.

The first time I ventured outside, it was to go from Blumenstrasse, where we lived on the second floor of a massive turn-of-the-century building, to Bahnhofstrasse. That's where I'd thrown up on the way home from school one day the previous October. I'd been feeling weak for days, in a way that was completely new to me. Every step was an effort. When I was faced with stairs either at home or at school, my legs would hardly carry me. I had no appetite. Even if I sat down at the table hungry, I soon felt queasy. I woke up every morning with a dry mouth and the sensation that my insides were in the wrong place and too heavy for my body. I was ashamed of being so weak. I was even more ashamed when I threw up. That was another thing that had never happened to me before. My mouth was suddenly full, I tried to swallow everything down again, and clenched my teeth with my hand in front of my mouth, but it all burst out of my mouth anyway straight through my fingers. I leaned against the wall of the building, looked down at the vomit around my feet, and retched something clear and sticky.

When rescue came, it was almost an assault. The woman seized my arm and pulled me through the dark entryway into the courtyard. Up above there were lines strung from window to window, loaded with laundry. Wood was stacked in the courtyard; in an open workshop a saw screamed and shavings flew. The woman turned on the tap, washed my hand first, and then cupped both of hers and threw water in my face. I dried myself with a handkerchief.

"Get that one!" There were two pails standing by the faucet; she grabbed one and filled it. I took the other one, filled it, and followed her through the entryway. She swung her arm, the water sluiced down across the walk and washed the vomit into the gutter. Then she took my pail and sent a second wave of water across the walk.

When she straightened up, she saw I was crying. "Hey, kid," she said, startled, "hey, kid" -- and took me in her arms. I wasn't much taller than she was, I could feel her breasts against my chest. I smelled the sourness of my own breath and felt her fresh sweat as she held me, and didn't know where to look. I stopped crying.

She asked me where I lived, put the pails down in the entryway, and took me home, walking beside me holding my schoolbag in one hand and my arm in the other. It's no great distance from Bahnhofstrasse to Blumenstrasse. She walked quickly, and her decisiveness helped me to keep pace with her. She said goodbye in front of our building.

That same day my mother called in the doctor, who diagnosed hepatitis. At some point I told my mother about the woman. If it hadn't been for that, I don't think I would have gone to see her. But my mother simply assumed that as soon as I was better, I would use my pocket money to buy flowers, go introduce myself, and say thank you, which was why at the end of February I found myself heading for Bahnhofstrasse.
SALON | Jan. 19, 1998

BACK TO THE SALON BOOK AWARDS INTRODUCTION















Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.

[Salon magazine] [Salon book awards] http://www.salonmagazine.com/bookawards/