Description: "On the Marble Cliffs (Auf den Marmorklippen) is a novella by Ernst Jèunger published in 1939 describing the upheaval and ruin of a serene agricultural society. The peaceful and traditional people, located on the shores of a large bay, are surrounded by the rough pastoral folk in the surrounding hills, who feel increasing pressure from the unscrupulous and lowly followers of the dreaded head forester. The narrator and protagonist lives on the marble cliffs as a botanist with his brother Otho, his son Erio from a past relationship and Erio's grandmother Lampusa. The idyllic life is threatened by the erosion of values and traditions, losing its inner power. The head forester uses this opportunity to establish a new order based on dictatorial rule, large numbers of mindless followers and the use of violence, torture and murder"--
Review Quotes: "Jünger brings to mind a different epoch, one when both soldiering and philosophy held a vastly different status in civic life...[his] writing has a comparable feeling with certain alchemical emblems: still waters, wise vipers, and black dogs. One encounters a blissed-out feel for the natural world here, but also terrible foreboding. On the Marble Cliffs is a warning of what lies up ahead." --Ian Penman, City Journal
"On the Marble Cliffs [is] a parable of ascendant barbarism that contains an oblique protest against Nazism...[In] On the Marble Cliffs, Jünger attempted something riskier: a dark fable with unmistakable modern overtones." --Alex Ross, The New Yorker "The classical beauty of the writing, in Tess Lewis's exquisite translation, gives a sense of the author's sympathies. . . . [H]is short, prismatic book is beautiful." --Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal"[A] literary achievement of the highest order." --Nil Santiáñez, The Massachusetts Review "[Jünger] was a sporadic critic of the moral obtuseness that grew like vines all around him." --Thomas Meany, Harper's Magazine "Jünger's coolly detached empirical style, with its Nietzschean cadences evident in On the Marble Cliffs, has its detractors. . . . Yet the primacy of his poetic imagination, his born naturalist's observational perceptiveness, and the noble humanness undergirding his writing lend it unequivocal greatness." --Will Stone, Times Literary Supplement "On the Marble Cliffs might be called Jünger's descent into the maelstrom, a record of terror seen and survived. . . . An allegory that does not moralize, its hermeticism is inviolable and inimitable." --Thomas R. Nevin, Ernst Jünger and Germany: Into the Abyss, 1914-1945 "On the Marble Cliffs is a great book and virtually no one I've ever mentioned it to has read it." --W.S. Merwin