Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Good Men

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Brilliant absurdist chronicle of a hapless outsider's struggle to do the right thing.

Arnon Grunberg's fourteenth novel charts the downfall of Geniek Janowski, a Polish-German firefighter doing his best to be a good father, husband, lover and colleague, only to fail on all fronts.

Geniek leads a seemingly unremarkable life with his wife, Wen, and their son, Jurek, in the sleepy Dutch province of Limburg, where everyone simply calls him "The Pole" because they can't pronounce his real name. He is the only foreigner and the only vegetarian at the fire station, yet to him the crew feels like a band of brothers.

When he discovers that the wife of his colleague, Beckers, is dying, The Pole is reminded of the role she played in his own life following the death of his eldest son, Borys—namely, by providing consolation in the form of unorthodox sexual acts. Racked by guilt, The Pole confessed the affair to his wife, and the retreated to a monastery for a year, where he ended up living in the henhouse. On his return, he is allowed to rejoin the fire brigade, though everyone in town has their doubts.

Grunberg has lost none of his edge in this acutely absurdist account of the powerlessness of human beings to alter their fate. Comfort, salvation, love, and solidarity seem out of reach. In the world of Good Men, illusions about humanity and, above all, brotherhood will never prevail.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 15, 2023
      Grunberg (Tirza) achieves a Dostoyevskian grandeur in this consummate tale of the travails of a Dutch firefighter. Geniek Janowski, nicknamed “the Polack” because of his name though he was born in the Netherlands, lives in the unglamorous city of Heerle. Tall, taciturn, and stoic, Geniek is a kind of holy fool figure who commands mockery and respect in equal measure from fellow firefighters and his family members. “Simple dullness you can live with. Your dullness is deathly,” his wife tells him at one point, a damning assessment he characteristically takes in stride. Geniek goes to great and expensive lengths to placate his older son, Borys, 12—a friendless, depressive outcast—by buying him a pony. This section is tragic and grotesquely comic in the vein of Thomas Bernhard; it’s also something close to a masterpiece. Various episodes of indignity and misfortune follow, most notably the death of Borys after he’s hit by a train, which tests the limits of Geniek’s capacity for suffering. Along the way, there’s a sad sex affair, spiritual yearning, and a stint spent living in a chicken coop. Geniek eventually returns to his wife and surviving son and tries to resume his “unassuming existence.” Grunberg is relentless in his portrayal of a sardonic and obscene world, one that proves an uncompromising testing ground for his hero. The result is a resounding success.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading