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Landscape in Concrete by Jakov Lind
Landscape in Concrete by Jakov Lind









Landscape in Concrete by Jakov Lind Landscape in Concrete by Jakov Lind

There is a early-Beckett-ian absurdity to his suggestion of possible plans for joining up, for instance, that he bury himself with a breathing pipe in nearby ground and burst from the earth when a funeral procession passes, suggesting that, “Anyone who sees a soldier in uniform rising out of the grave is bound to stand up for him.” The interaction between these two is all nit-picking and provocation, which eventually ends in an argument over who gets the liver of a goose they excitedly kill. Running into another deserter in the wilderness, he claims to only have briefly been thrown off track, eventually conspiring to dream up ways he can insert himself back into a position with his country’s military. Immediately we are not sure what is wrong with General Bachmann, as though he seems in clear control of his own mind, his ideas about how to unravel his predicament of displacement when forced to explain himself in meeting others prove that something in the most basic essence of his authority is off. Lind’s approach to his subject-which follows the path of a Nazi general who claims to have lost his regiment in a single incident (by drowning in an extremely deep pit of mud, he claims), running into various encampments where he must explain himself, adapt-is immediately provocative not only by way of its subject matter, and taking the voice of a sick side, but also in how slippery his perspective manages to be in how it projects the machinations of its conspirators as they continue through the rampant chaos of their world.

Landscape in Concrete by Jakov Lind

A complex depiction of fascism in action through the eyes of an Austrian-born Jew, written originally in German while living in the UK.











Landscape in Concrete by Jakov Lind