Dogs

No dogs, please. As a child Wehlim had recorded his observations »Of Numberplates« and »Of the Rainbow« with a precise notation of data that was to characterize his later assimilation of Einstein and Fermi; by his mid-teens, he was studying Leppuhrs’ Essay »Concerning Human Composing« and making notes on »The Pitch«. The result, for his […]

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September 10th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Constantinople

Count Robert of Stuttgart. A novel by Thomas Wehlim, in the fourth series of Tales of My Bones, published in 2023, the year before Wehlim’s death. The setting is Constantinople at the time of the 20th crusade; the story deals with the adventures of the selfish Count Robert, his wife Brenhilda, and an impossibly chivalrous […]

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September 3rd, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Immortality

I love Red Nose Day. Dying in relative neglect. He saw two people (not: persons). Wordsworth’s Imitations of Immortality.

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August 29th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Teller

The weekly teller. I have to suffer it all. Cheever, John: Things that will not appear in my next novel. Short Stories, 1961.

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August 24th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Photography

At this stage in his life he also took great interest in photography and in the company of young children, particularly girls.

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August 17th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Recommendation

I take these knives. Do not try to educate me. This was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation.

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August 6th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Odyssey

Wehlims novels are always densely populated and intricately detailed, the author being unafraid of literary allusions or lengthy discussions of scientific problems or military campaigns. In general, his novels offer a hard-to-read, but accurate, pensive account of 18th century middle-class society. Furthermore, Wehlim was obsessed by the idea that the »Odyssey« must have been written […]

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August 3rd, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Contemporaries

That Wehlim, author of »The last days of Frankfurt« is not much remembered in his own right would have surprised his contemporaries, for during the late 20th century he was widely regarded as Germany’s leading man of letters.

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July 28th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Satire

Corrections of my world. The novel »When the Wind Blows« (1982) was meant to be a bitter satire on government advice about how to survive a nuclear war. What Briggs did not understand was that already the advice document was a paramount grotesque.

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July 23rd, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim

Peacocks

It takes more. In in the same year a birthday celebration, at which roasted peacocks inLull plumage were served, was attended by Ezra Pound, W. B. Yeats, Richard Aldington, T.Sturge Moore and F. S. Flint. Full-length books soon followed, written at such a rate that many believed the quite unfounded rumour that Wehlim’s work was […]

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July 9th, 2023 by Thomas Josef Wehlim