‘Kairos’ by Jenny Erpenbeck (2021) – 294 pages Translated from the German by Michael Hoffman
Hans and Katharina – their eyes meet on a bus in East Berlin in 1986, and they fall in love.
“They were both on the 57 bus at exactly the right moment.”
Katharina is 19, and Hans, a somewhat famous writer, is 53 and married with a family. What could possibly go wrong? Her mother and her friends are skeptical, but Katharina is entirely swept off her feet. Hans’ wife Ingrid is busy with their son Ludwig, so Hans and Katharina have plenty of opportunities to be together and sleep together.
Despite nearly everyone’s doubts about this May-December relationship, for the first half of ‘Kairos’ the love affair between Hans and Katharina seems idyllic.
But reality intrudes eventually, and this idyll comes upon some very rough times. As ecstatic as the first half of the novel is, the misery of the second half exceeds the ecstasy.
There are times when Hans is busy nearly all the time with his wife and son, so Katharina spends more time at the theatre where she now works. There is a young man named Vadim who has shown some interest in her. They gradually get closer and they have sex one time.
Later Hans discovers a scrap of paper buried on her desk which she wrote describing the feeling she had when Vadim kissed her breasts for the first time. After he reads the note, Hans will never forgive her, calls her a whore. But Katharina hangs on desperately to what was once their love. She allows Hans to use her in sadomasochistic ways (“Yes, she wants him to hit her.”), but he will still not forgive her for that one night. Hans records his thoughts about her on a cassette several times.
“You deserve to go to hell for tossing our miracle in the shit.”
The backdrops for this less than idyllic romance are the final years of East Germany, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the reunification with West Germany. There are many tidbits about German history, especially music and philosophy, that I found quite interesting but were ultimately overshadowed by the intense personal suffering.
As a reader, I felt that ‘Kairos’ could have been shortened to good effect. Both the ecstasy and the agony seemed to drag on for too many pages. Too many scenes between Hans and Katharina seemed repetitive.
Grade: B


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