The Mussel Feast

Paperback, 105 pages

Published Feb. 1, 2013 by Peirene Press.

ISBN:
978-1-908670-08-3
Copied ISBN!
Goodreads:
16138043

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (1 review)

The modern German classic that has shaped an entire generation.

A mother and her two teenage children sit at the dinner table. In the middle stands a large pot of cooked mussels. Why has the father not returned home? As the evening wears on, we glimpse the issues that are tearing this family apart.

"I wrote this book in August 1989, just before the fall of the Berlin Wall. I wanted to understand how revolutions start. It seemed logical to use the figure of a tyrannical father and turn the story into a German family saga."

  • Birgit Vanderbeke

2 editions

How dictators fall

5 stars

After starting and failing to read to an end five different fiction books, seven in total (lockdown, work stress, general restlessness), I took a stab at this one. Admittedly, it is just over 100 pages, but I started at 8am and by 12 I was finished, with a break in between for breakfast.

A family escaped from the DDR. The mum and two teenage kids are waiting for the dad to come back from a business trip - ready to celebrate his promotion with a mussel feast. The time passes, but the dad does't arrive - and the more he's late, the more we learn about him; the more we learn about him the less we like him: tyrannical, unsympathetic, arrogant, abusive, even violent.

At breakfast, T and I argued over how to interpret it. She remembered reading it's supposed to be a critique of the West, or the East, …

Subjects

  • family
  • domestic abuse
  • Fiction
  • Germany

Places

  • Germany
  • Berlin