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Where You Come From
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
14 posts | 9 read | 1 reading | 6 to read
Staniic is exceptionally talented. Los Angeles Times Winner of the German Book Prize Translated from the German by Damion Searls From the internationally acclaimed author of Before the Feast and How the Soldier Repairs the Gramophone comes a prize-winning novel that asks: what makes us who we are? In August, 1992, a boy and his mother flee the war in Yugoslavia and arrive in Germany. Six months later, the boys father joins them, bringing a brown suitcase, insomnia, and a scar on his thigh. Saa Staniics Where You Come From is a novel about this family, whose world is uprooted and remade by war: their history, their life before the conflict, and the years that followed their escape as they created a new life in a new country. Blending autofiction, fable, and choose-your-own-adventure, Where You Come From is set in a village where only thirteen people remain, in lost and made-up memories, in coincidences, in choices, and in a dragons den. Translated by Damion Searls, its a novel about homelands, both remembered and imagined, lost and found. A book that playfully twists form and genre with wit and heart to explore questions that lie inside all of us: about language and shame, about arrival and making it just in time, about luck and death, about what role our origins and memories play in our lives.
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review
Hooked_on_books
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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Pickpick

I initially really struggled to get into this book, as it‘s told in short nonsequential bits. But it‘s on the National Book Award longlist for translated list, so I really wanted to give it a try and ultimately I‘m glad I did. It ended up coming together really well for me, ready more like a memoir until the delightful final section with a major format change. Very interesting immigration story.

Julsmarshall Love your sweet reading buddy! 13mo
57 likes1 comment
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BarbaraBB
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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#BookReport 49/22

I read three books this week. The tagged one I read in Dutch and was a difficult book. I enjoyed Ocean State a lot, as well as An African in Greenland, the last book I will read for #readingAfrica2022.

Cinfhen I have one left to get to for #ReadingAfrica too, but I won‘t complete the challenge 💁‍♀️ 1y
Megabooks Great week, especially since you‘re really busy! 👏🏻👏🏻 1y
BarbaraBB @Cinfhen Neither do I! I have about 8 countries left I think. 1y
BarbaraBB @Megabooks Thanks! ❤️ 1y
61 likes4 comments
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BarbaraBB
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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Mehso-so

This book was difficult to read, not in language but in style. The author tells about his life as a refugee in Germany, about his youth in Bosnia and about returning there after the devastating war that divided Yugoslavia and its people. Chapters are short, snippets of his memories. This made it hard to connect even though I am very interested in the Balkan war as well as in reading about life as a refugee in Europe.

#FoodAndLit 🇩🇪

Catsandbooks That's rough 🇩🇪 1y
Hooked_on_books This is on the National Book Awards longlist for translated fiction, so I‘ll be reading it in the near future. I‘ll guard my expectations based on your review. 1y
BarbaraBB @Hooked_on_books I am curious about what you‘ll think. Maybe it was just my state of mind but I found it hard to feel involved in the book. It probably is, it won the European Literature Prize 🤷🏻‍♀️ 1y
Cathythoughts Great pic 💫 1y
73 likes4 comments
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charl08
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic

In Germany lots of older people spend the twilight of their lives in places like this. Is that what they call it, the twilight of their life? There are discussions with the family early on, agreements with friends to live in the same place once they can't live alone anymore ...

In Bosnia, there aren't many senior facilities. Grandmother would probably have fallen off the stove every day rather than voluntarily gone into a home.

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charl08
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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...it was practically impossible for freelance artists - especially a) writers and b) clowns....

batsy Ooof 😆 2y
39 likes1 comment
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charl08
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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Relative pronouns. A country whose language you can speak is not necessarily more your country...

In the evenings, your war comes on for a little while. You change the channel: Die Hard with Bruce Willis. Bruce Willis speaks German. You understand Bruce Willis just fine. But things aren't going too well for Bruce Willis, physically. "Yippie-ki-yay, Schweinebacke," he says, and you get out your vocab notebook.

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charl08
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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We imagined our Heidelberg home as a short-term escape from the unreality of the war, which had become reality. If we had to flee today, or if the conditions at the 1992 border were as restrictive as they are at the EU borders now, we would never have reached Heidelberg. The trip would have ended at a Hungarian barbed wire fence.

Libby1 ❤️ 2y
43 likes1 comment
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charl08
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic

Oskoruša sounds harsh and grumpy. No syllable you can cling to, zero rhythm, a bizarre sequence of sounds.... Hard and Slavic, the way things end in the Balkans.

I could leave that in, people would probably accept it from me, seeing as I'm from the Balkans myself. Hard Slavic endings? ....

Actually, though, the image makes no sense. What are we supposed to picture as these "hard Slavic endings"?

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charl08
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic

She was curt, not wanting to talk about herself. Only when I asked about other people, about neighbors, did she give longer answers: "No one's died or gone crazy since the last time you were here. Rada's still around, Zorica's still around. And Nada up on the fifth floor. They're only a little crazy. It happens as you get older. But it's okay. It's good they're here. Even crazy I like them."

BarbaraBB Is it good? I have it lined up too! 2y
charl08 @BarbaraBB early days. I got distracted by work (and manga). 2y
BarbaraBB @charl08 I know what you mean 🙂 2y
36 likes3 comments
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BarbaraBB
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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#WeeklyForecast 40/22

I hope to finish Booth this week. Still enjoying it. I also started Gravel Heart for #ReadingAfrica2022 and because I have wanted to read Gurnah ever since he won the Noble Prize. The tagged book has won major European literary prices and feels like a book I need to read. So these are my plans!

Cinfhen Looks promising 😻 2y
charl08 I have this one on the TBR pile. 2y
BarbaraBB @charl08 I am eager to read that one too. 2y
55 likes3 comments
review
Floresj
Where You Come From | Sasa Stanisic
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Pickpick

A Yugoslavian boy is a refugee in Germany is part of the premise, but is the background for the best parts of this book. The boy traces his relationships with his grandparents, with his grandmother‘s dementia getting a starring role. The ending is so playful, that it deserves a 5/5 star recommendation😁

charl08 Yes, the ending deserves all the ✨️✨️✨️✨️ 2y
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Dilara
HERKUNFT | Sasa Stanisic
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Really enjoying Saša Stanišic's autobiographical novel about his childhood and teenage years in Visegrad and Heidelberg (pictured above). I like Stanišic's self-deprecating humour and his eye for strange details.

#Yugoslavia #WarRefugee #BosnianWar #Germany

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Jari-chan
HERKUNFT | Sasa Stanisic
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Pickpick

Stanišić is an impressive writer, using a foreign language much better than most of the Germans do. In this book he tells us what it means to flee from a terrible war, to learn a new language and about the importance of the family. Highly recommend especially to readers who know people from Ex-Yugoslavia.

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Attacki
HERKUNFT | Sasa Stanisic
Pickpick

Lachen und Weinen und nachdenklich sein. Und das perfekte Ende, wenn man sich wünscht, dass es noch nicht zu Ende sein soll.