But, at the same time, Handke also demonstrates that the life can sometimes be to terrible to be expressed in language.
The book ends, significantly, with the same Handke sitting at his desk and reading the article about the suicide of a woman. It is not only that the writing turns upon itself, to reveal that the most important subject of the book has not been altogether elucidated and has not been given meaning to yet, but also, the fact that the author is in front if a piece if a newspaper article relating this event is crucial: the newspaper does the same thing that his book proposes to do- relates the event of the suicide, but at the same time formulates it, or tries to put it into words.
Handke's work is thus partly biographical- with the biography of his mother which is presented in a very plain style where there are no artifices and no dramatic episodes- and partly the author's play with words, and his attempt to translate the experience into language:
Reading the paper, drinking beer, looking out the window, I gradually sank into a tired, impersonal sense of well-being. Yes, I...
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