Paperback, 238 pages

English language

Published Nov. 13, 2022 by Norton & Company Limited, W. W..

ISBN:
978-0-8112-3194-7
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While vacationing in a hunting lodge in the Austrian mountains, a middle-aged woman awakens one morning to find herself separated from the rest of the world by an invisible wall. With a cat, a dog, and a cow as her sole companions, she learns how to survive and cope with her loneliness.

Allegorical yet deeply personal and absorbing, The Wall is at once a critique of modern civilization, a nuanced and loving portrait of a relationship between a woman and her animals, a thrilling survival story, a Cold War-era dystopian adventure, and a truly singular feminist classic.

26 editions

reviewed Die Wand by Marlen Haushofer (Die Frau in der Literatur)

Living With Silence Until It Answered Back

When I read The Wall, I felt drawn into a form of German Literature that speaks through restraint rather than explanation. The novel opens with a simple, terrifying premise: an invisible wall cuts a woman off from the rest of the world. That isolation settles in quietly, and as I followed her first days alone in the alpine landscape, I felt my own sense of time begin to slow. The absence of answers did not frustrate me. It focused me.

The narrator’s life becomes defined by survival and routine. She learns to hunt, farm, and endure long winters with only animals for company. What struck me was how calm her voice remains. I felt the weight of her solitude not through despair, but through repetition. Each task mattered. Each mistake carried consequence. Reading her careful attention to weather, food, and movement made me aware of how distant my own …

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