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Mario Wirz

    December 3, 1956 – May 30, 2013
    Umarmungen am Ende der Nacht. Erzählungen
    Jetzt ist ein ganzes Leben
    Sieben Leben hat die Woche
    Pozno je, ne morem dihati
    I call the wolves
    It's late, I can't breathe
    • 2013

      It's late, I can't breathe

      • 124 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Mario, a 35-year-old gay actor, knows that he doesn't have long to live. For five years, he has been surviving himself. For five years, the virus has schooled him in fear. Mario lies in the prison of his room and gives himself failing grades for his life—an F for his lack of success, and F for his pathological need for intimacy, and F for his neurotic lack of independence. Locked within him is resentment toward his mother, the lifelong yearning for a father, and a pimply-faced kid who cowers and refuses to grow up. Mario stumbles through the wilderness of men and waits for the call. He's learned his les

      It's late, I can't breathe
    • 2013

      I call the wolves

      • 80 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      Mario Wirz is wrestling with a problem of major proportions--the constant threat of death hanging over his shoulder. Death is his muse. It is a shadow that hangs over all of us, but it is the fate of some to feel it more keenly, to live with it minute-by-minute, hour-by-hour, and day-by-day. These poems hone in relentlessly on this topic, until one is inexorably affected by their stark, existential reality.Wirz's poems have been published in French, Italian, Ukrainian, Polish, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, and Chinese, but it took ten years for his first novel to be published in English, and now the publication of this companion volume of poems is made possible only by recent changes in the publishing world—-the rise of e-books and desktop publishing—that have made it far easier and more cost--effective to publish literature in a minor key. But this volume, though small, is not minor. It is poetry that speaks to all of us.

      I call the wolves