Dog Years (novel)

Dog Years, published in Germany in 1963 as Hundejahre, is a novel by Günter Grass. It is the third and last volume of his Danzig Trilogy, the other two being The Tin Drum and Cat and Mouse.

Grass's style frequently parodies Martin Heidegger's arcane philosophical diction in Being and Time, which one of the teenage protagonists likes to poke fun at. The years from the prewar to the postwar era are presented in Dog Years through the perspective of three different narrators, a team directed by Amsel—alias Brauxel—who makes scarecrows in man's image. The seemingly solid childhood friendship of Amsel and Matem evolves into the love-hate relationship between Jew and non-Jew under the impact of Nazi ideology. When the former friends from the region of the Vistula finally meet again in the West, the ominous führer dog who followed Matem on his odyssey is left behind in Brauxel's subterranean world of scarecrows. While Dog Years, like The Tin Drum, again accounts for the past through the eyes of an artist, the artist is no longer a demonic tin-drummer in the guise of a child but the ingenious maker of a world of objects reflecting the break between the creations of nature and those of men. Referring to Amsel's "keen sense of reality in all its innumerable forms,"


Works by Günter Grass
Danzig Trilogy
  • The Tin Drum (1959)
  • Cat and Mouse (1961)
  • Dog Years (1963)
Fiction
  • Local Anaesthetic (1969)
  • The Flounder (1977)
  • The Meeting at Telgte (1979)
  • The Rat (1986)
  • My Century (1999)
  • Crabwalk (2002)
Memoirs
  • Peeling the Onion (2006)
  • The Box (2008)
  • Grimms Wörter (2010)
Poetry
  • "What Must Be Said" (2012)

Famous quotes containing the words dog and/or years:

    All you’ve got is the word of a fool dog. It’s been my experience that a bloodhound is the foolishest dog that is. I don’t remember of anybody ever keeping a bloodhound for a yard dog. They’re such dad blasted fools.
    Laurence Stallings (1894–1968)

    I’d give all wealth that years have piled,
    The slow result of Life’s decay,
    To be once more a little child
    For one bright summer-day.
    Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson] (1832–1898)