Sylva Fischerová

The World Clock

Světový orloj Světový orloj
Světový orloj
Druhé město, 2017, 90 pp
9788072273997

“Instead of the titular astronomical clock, Fischerová’s poems remind me more of an hourglass where the poet turns her life and family history upside down, up and down, up and down.”
— Literární noviny

“There is something of the tragedy of the ancients in the way humanity has always been tormented by the awareness that a possible non-existing essence will escape it. Fischerová writes supremely well about the eternal world-weariness of cognizant beings. She uses a wide range of references, paraphrases and foreign-language quotes, the connections and contexts of which are not easy for the uninitiated reader to grasp.”
— A2

Rights sold:
Germany (KLAK Verlag)
Foreign rights:
Prague Literary Agency
http://www.praglit.de/
maria@sileny.de
Read an excerpt:
English
Goodreads rating
80%

The world clock showed the poet the diversity of the faces that move around it: places, historical experiences, events and people.

Poetry  |  English sample translation available

In her new poetry collection, Sylva Fischerová summarises her experience of life and poetry and connects them to the various corners of the globe, to the past and present of these places and the historical events that shaped their form, appearance and future. A personal topography intersects with the suprapersonal, with a history of civilization that is much older. These poetic slices of historical events, together with the spaces where they took place, create a remarkable framework for a collection of poems, but also for memories linked to family, emigration and war…

fischerova

Sylva Fischerová (1963, Prague) is a Czech poet, writer and classical philologist. She was born in Prague, but she lived in Olomouc until the age of eighteen. Her debut publication The Tremor of Racehorses / Chvění závodních koní (Bloodaxe Books, 1990) was released in 1986. She is the author of twelve poetry collections, and also writes short stories, novels, children’s stories and academic papers. Her poems have been translated into many languages, three books having been published in the UK and the USA, with her works of prose being published in various languages including English, German, Dutch, Portuguese and Polish. Her work has also been incorporated into two albums by the singer Monika Načeva. In 2018 Fischerová became the first Poet Laureate of Prague, the city where she lives and lectures on ancient Greek literature, theology and philosophy at Charles University. Her most recent published works include a love story set in 1980s Prague entitled Elza and the Toadstool / Elza a muchomůrka (2022) and the poetry collection A Different Life. Wittgenstein / Jiný život. Wittgenstein (2023).


“Instead of the titular astronomical clock, Fischerová’s poems remind me more of an hourglass where the poet turns her life and family history upside down, up and down, up and down.”
— Literární noviny

“There is something of the tragedy of the ancients in the way humanity has always been tormented by the awareness that a possible non-existing essence will escape it. Fischerová writes supremely well about the eternal world-weariness of cognizant beings. She uses a wide range of references, paraphrases and foreign-language quotes, the connections and contexts of which are not easy for the uninitiated reader to grasp.”
— A2

Světový orloj
Druhé město, 2017, 90 pp
9788072273997
Rights sold:
Germany (KLAK Verlag)
Foreign rights:
Prague Literary Agency
http://www.praglit.de/
maria@sileny.de
Read an excerpt:
English
Goodreads rating
80%