I still occasionally end up buying a book for its cover, or at least picking it out to look at on that basis. This one (published last year) got to me through that Ernst Ludwig Kirchner painting, Mountain Peak (1918). It is extremely well chosen as an illustration of the story, which concerns a high pasture with an evil reputation, avoided for twenty years until a new group of shepherds volunteer to spend a summer up there. It doesn't end well for them. There is an excellent, comprehensive article by Alice-Catherine Carls about Great Fear on the Mountain (1926) and its Swiss author Charles Ferdinand Ramuz. I'll quote here some of what she says about his landscape imagery:
In Great Fear, the glacier tests the limits of human understanding and causes a loss of reality conducive to extracorporal and paranormal sensations, hallucinations, phantasms, and dreams. It becomes a purgatory to “vapors and legions of errant souls” experiencing a “hypnotic delirium, a kind of awake-dream.”
Other settings that describe unfamiliar, disorienting light and sound effects include the mountain slopes’ dense forest, the absolute darkness of the night, the blinding light of the noon sun, and the silence of high altitudes’ “mineral world.” The magnificent sunrises on the jagged mountain summits are described in impressionistic, worshipping fervor, with dawn alighting on the landscape like a bird and the sky being so close that one could touch it.
The disturbed psychologies of the characters in Great Fear could be likened to the state Kirchner was in after being discharged from the army. As a recent article in the Art Newspaper explains, he 'was a physical and psychological wreck when he first arrived in Davos in 1917. Addicted to alcohol and morphine, he was suffering from blackouts and paralysis.' At first he stayed with a nurse on the Stafelalp, in a mountain hut - “It’s very beautiful up here ... and I could paint so much, if I weren’t so weak.” A year later he was doing better and living in Davos where he remained until 1925, painting landscapes like the one Archipelago Books have used for Great Fear on the Mountain.
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