
"Aloof, laconic, and full of irony, Elfriede Schweiger's narrative
causes a period of upheaval in her life to pass like a parade before
the reader's view."
“On
our 20th wedding anniversary my husband had invited me to an elegant
dinner. We sat in the casino-restaurant by candlelight and had
already ordered our meal. I had asked for filets of milk-fed lamb,
he a wiener schnitzel. He raised his glass and instead of saying:
“To our future happiness” he looked at me intently and said: “I’m
taking this opportunity today to tell you that I’m planning to leave
you. And so I’d like to drink with you to the years still lying
ahead of us, and which we’ll be spending apart.” I felt that this
could only be one of his bad jokes, and gave a somewhat forced
laugh…”
A ghastly snippet in the life of 52-year-old Elfriede
Schweiger—and an opportunity. The abandoned wife and mother of a
full-grown son studies law and opens her own practice. The housewife
is transformed into a career woman. But new men enter her life, and
with them come new problems.
On the Phone is the journal of a woman in upheaval and
transition. Evelyn Grill dissects the physical and spiritual
sensitivities of this woman in the prime of life, recounting moments
of hope, disappointment, love, self-doubt, and megalomania. When
Evelyn Grill writes about people whose life is at a dead-end, she
succeeds through her writing in finding them a route to freedom. |