Literary Award Winners Fiction Book Club discussion

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Austerlitz
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Austerlitz by W.G. Sebald, pages 1 to 150
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George
(last edited Jun 01, 2019 04:56AM)
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Jun 01, 2019 04:56AM

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Thanks Mary. An entertaining video that certainly shows how huge the railway building is. I then typed Antwerp railway station images on the Internet. It's quite an impressive building. Why are major railway station buildings so large? Even Adelaide's railway station is an impressive building.
I am one third the way through this book. It's a mesmerising read that for the first forty odd pages seems to be like reading a personalised travel journal. Then the life story of Jaques Austerlitz begins. An original, interesting story that meanders along with reflective descriptions. So far an intriguing, clever, interesting read.
I am one third the way through this book. It's a mesmerising read that for the first forty odd pages seems to be like reading a personalised travel journal. Then the life story of Jaques Austerlitz begins. An original, interesting story that meanders along with reflective descriptions. So far an intriguing, clever, interesting read.



An Interesting question that I haven't been able to answer. Napoleon's arguably greatest victory. The battle is referred to on pages 71 and 72 of my Modern Library edition.
Just a passing thought and probably just coincidental but the name "Austerlitz" is close to "Auschwitz" (the Polish concentration camp). Sebald saw a program on TV about 3 year old twins in 1939 arriving in London where they were given a new identity, adopted by a childless Welsh minister and his wife. Only 50 years later did one of the surviving twins discover who her parents were. She published a memoir in 1999 titled, Rosa's Child: One Woman's Search for Her Past.
