Voici le roman le plus célèbre et le plus émouvant de Marlen Haushofer, journal de bord d’une femme ordinaire, confrontée à une expérience-limite. Après une catastrophe planétaire, l’héroïne se retrouve seule dans un chalet en pleine forêt autrichienne, séparée du reste du monde par un mur invisible au-delà duquel toute vie semble s’être pétrifiée durant la nuit. Tel un moderne Robinson, elle organise sa survie en compagnie de quelques animaux familiers, prend en main son destin dans un combat quotidien contre la forêt, les intempéries et la maladie. Et ce qui aurait pu être un simple exercice de style sur un thème à la mode prend dès lors la dimension d’une aventure bouleversante où le labeur, la solitude et la peur constituent les conditions de l’expérience humaine
The 2012 adaptation of this classic dystopian novel is directed by Julian Roman Pölsler and stars internationally renowned actress Martina Gedeck.
“I can allow myself to write the truth; all the people for whom I have lied throughout my life are dead…” writes the heroine of Marlen Haushofer’s The Wall, a quite ordinary, unnamed middle-aged woman who awakens to find she is the last living human being. Surmising her solitude is the result of a military experiment gone awry, she begins the terrifying work of not only survival but also self-renewal. The Wall is at once a simple and moving journal—with talk of potatoes and beans, of hoping for a calf, of counting matches, of forgetting the taste of sugar and the use of one’s name—and a disturbing meditation on twentieth-century history.
“The Wall is a wonderful novel. It is not often that you can say only a woman could have written this book, but women in particular will understand the heroine’s loving devotion to the details of making and keeping life, every day felt as a victory against everything that would like to undermine and destroy. It is as absorbing as Robinson Crusoe.”—Doris Lessing, Nobel Prize–winning author