APRIL 2020
Kris Martin
Idiot
Distanz Verlag, 2020
DEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
Our project is not only about finding and sharing great books, but also about exploring the edges and borders of non-fiction literature. We once sent out a wonderful children’s book (in October 2015) where the context of how the book came to be was whata built the bridge between fiction and non-fiction for us. Other examples were the printed true-to-scale reproduction of the runway of Berlin’s former Tempelhof airport (September 2015) or an everlasting calendar which could become your own personal (non-fiction?) diary (February 2018). It’s 2020 already – so I felt we could dare once more to choose a book which might be more of an artwork in and of itself than something you’ll read page by page. Fjodor Dostoyevsky wrote “The Idiot” in 1867 and 1868. It’s a complex novel with Prince Lev Nikolayevich Myshkin at its center. Prince Myshkin is an outsider who returns home to Russia from the isolation of a Swiss sanatorium. His warm-hearted openness and positive attitude towards his fellow humans collides with the primarily calculating and machinating behavior of St. Peterburg’s fine society. The Belgian artist Kris Martin took Dostoyevsky’s novel and wrote it out by hand, word by word, sentence by sentence. The only thing he changed was the name of its main character: Kris Martin just replaced Prince Myshkin with his own name wherever he found him in the 1,494 pages. A gesture worth thinking about. Also a minor procedure which, for me, once more marks the border between what we call fiction and our own lives.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm
Kris Martin
Idiot
Distanz Verlag, 2020
Read InscriptionDEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
Our project is not only about finding and sharing great books, but also about exploring the edges and borders of non-fiction literature. We once sent out a wonderful children’s book (in October 2015) where the context of how the book came to be was whata built the bridge between fiction and non-fiction for us. Other examples were the printed true-to-scale reproduction of the runway of Berlin’s former Tempelhof airport (September 2015) or an everlasting calendar which could become your own personal (non-fiction?) diary (February 2018). It’s 2020 already – so I felt we could dare once more to choose a book which might be more of an artwork in and of itself than something you’ll read page by page. Fjodor Dostoyevsky wrote “The Idiot” in 1867 and 1868. It’s a complex novel with Prince Lev Nikolayevich Myshkin at its center. Prince Myshkin is an outsider who returns home to Russia from the isolation of a Swiss sanatorium. His warm-hearted openness and positive attitude towards his fellow humans collides with the primarily calculating and machinating behavior of St. Peterburg’s fine society. The Belgian artist Kris Martin took Dostoyevsky’s novel and wrote it out by hand, word by word, sentence by sentence. The only thing he changed was the name of its main character: Kris Martin just replaced Prince Myshkin with his own name wherever he found him in the 1,494 pages. A gesture worth thinking about. Also a minor procedure which, for me, once more marks the border between what we call fiction and our own lives.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm