- Der Schrecksenmeister
Der Schrecksenmeister is a fantasy novel by
Walter Moers , first published in August 2007. It is the fifth of his novels set on the continent of Zamonia, and as in the earlierEnsel and Krete andThe City of Dreaming Books , Moers purports to be acting merely as the translator of a work by the Zamonian writer Hildegunst von Mythenmetz.The novel is described on the title page as 'a culinary fairy tale', reflecting the importance within the story of the theme of cooking and eating.
ynopsis
The novel takes place in Sledwaya, the "least healthy place in Zamonia". The city is dominated by the Schrecksenmeister of the title, Eißpin, who lives in a building which towers over the town and who combines a range of activities: alchemy; controlling the city's Schrecksen (roughly equivalent to witches); spreading disease among the city's inhabitants; and painting pictures of natural disasters.
The novel's other main character is Echo, a 'Kratze' (an animal identical to a cat except that it can speak all languages and has two livers). On the death of his owner, Echo faces starvation until he makes a deal with the Schrecksenmeister: the latter will fatten the Kratze for a month, in return for which he will then be permitted to kill Echo and extract his fat. Eißpin intends to use the fat for various alchemistic purposes, but in particular as the final ingredient which he needs to secure the secret of eternal life: it turns out that Echo's deceased owner had been the long-lost lover of Eißpin, who intends to bring her back to life.
Echo attempts to escape from his pact, enlisting the help of a one-eyed owl, Fiodor F. Fiodor, and the last Schreckse in Sledwaya, Izanuela, who is in love with Eißpin. Echo and Izanuela plan to use a love potion to make Eißpin return the Schreckse's love. The plan fails, and Izanuela is killed, but in revenge the living houses of the Schrecksen destroy the tower of Eißpin, burying him inside. Echo is saved and sets off in search of his own love with a female Kratze.
Intertextuality
"Der Schrecksenmeister" is a reworking of the novella "Spiegel, das Kätzchen" ("Mirror, the Little Cat") by
Gottfried Keller . The names are only lightly transformed: Keller's novel features the alchemist and Hexenmeister (witch master) Pineiß, living in the town of Seldwyla. Keller's work also features a contract in which the alchemist is to fatten up the cat in return for its fat, but in the original the cat escapes by tricking him into marrying the town's witch.The novel features two afterwords: one by the Zamonian writer Hildegunst von Mythenmetz, in which he explains that he is reworking a story originally by 'Gofid Letterkerl' (an anagram of Gottfried Keller), because Letterkerl's style makes his works inaccessible to modern readers. In the second afterword, Moers informs the reader of the troubles which he had translating von Mythenmetz's work, which dates from his 'hypochondriac' phase; Moers ultimately reduced the length of the book by some 700 pages through the elimination of von Mythenmetz's lengthy discussion of his own physical condition.
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