---
product_id: 66526973
title: "The End of Days"
brand: "jenny erpenbecksusan bernofsky"
price: "S/.114"
currency: PEN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.pe/products/66526973-the-end-of-days
store_origin: PE
region: Peru
---

# The End of Days

**Brand:** jenny erpenbecksusan bernofsky
**Price:** S/.114
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** The End of Days by jenny erpenbecksusan bernofsky
- **How much does it cost?** S/.114 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pe](https://www.desertcart.pe/products/66526973-the-end-of-days)

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## Description

The End of Days

## Images

![The End of Days - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61zlyhYzIML.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    "Is it a sign of cowardice if one leaves one's life behind, or a sign of character if one has the strength to start anew?"
  

*by M***E on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 24, 2014*

(4.5 stars) In this unusual novel, the unnamed main character has five "deaths" in the novel's five "books," as the author examines the very nature of time, mortality, fate, coincidence, and the effects of a death on the people connected to that character.  Here, however, death is not permanent.  If the unnamed main character makes a bad choice and dies, German author Jenny Erpenbeck simply changes one of the conditions which brought about her death and retells her story.  There is no heavenly hand, no higher deity, no fate with predictable goals or rewards controlling the outcomes here, only the hand of the author, with her long view and broad themes.Erpenbeck aims high, creating an unnamed main character from early twentieth-century Galicia (now incorporated as parts of Poland and Ukraine) who endures two world wars and their aftereffects, the growth of communism, the division of Germany, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and other major events of European history over the course of a century.  The main character's death-defying personal experiences parallel those wrought by political changes, and as she endures, or dies and is given a second chance, she also becomes an "Everywoman" for the century.  Her intimate life story, portrayed within the context of major historical events in various locations in Eastern Europe, makes the small details of a person's life feel real within the world in miniature, her life a microcosm of the continent over the course of a century.In the opening section, which recounts the death of an eight-month-old baby shortly after the beginning of the twentieth century, the author vividly recreates the personal devastation it brings to the child's family.  An "intermezzo" suggests a way the baby might have been saved, if only....  Book II takes place in 1919, after World War I, and what is left of the family has moved to Vienna, where 450,000 refugees like them from Galicia have migrated, hoping to find food. These two "books," tension-filled and dramatic, keep the focus on the themes of time and chance and death, while each "Intermezzo" between the chapters suggests an alternative time frame which could have changed the course of lives.Book III takes a new direction, and the narrative style changes as description becomes subordinated to the tumult of political events.  Here, it is 1935, and the main character, a committed communist, has become involved in political intrigue in Moscow, making her a candidate for the gulag. The emphasis on the political and sociological, while important from the point of view of twentieth century history, supersedes that of the main character here, and some readers may find their attention to the personal narrative wandering in this section.  Book IV continues the story through the next generation, and Book V depicts the life and thoughts of an elderly woman - Frau Hoffmann, age ninety - as she and her heirs separately consider her experiences through the possessions which she has left behind.  Serious and literary, the novel never underestimates the reader, always providing new insights which expand our view of the past and increase our understanding of themes.  With the exception of Book III, which feels a bit out of character to me, this is a first-class literary novel which deserves all the attention it is receiving.

### ⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    The meaning of death for a life.
  

*by T***N on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 3, 2015*

This novel is intellectually interesting. A person dies. But then their life continues and the novel shows us a single life ended in death at different points. A baby dies, but what if she lived to teens and died then? but what if she lived to middle age and died? or what if she died of old age? The idea is neat, interesting, but the execution is not particularly moving, emotionally.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    "Tumbling out of all the time there ever was, would be, is."
  

*by J***N on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 12, 2014*

A few years ago, I discovered - through the recommendation of a friend - a stunning and poetic little masterpiece titled Visitation, containing a haunting narrative that carefully wove its way in and out of history and time.  The author was Jenny Erpenbeck and, since then, I've eagerly awaited her newest work. And finally, it's here.The theme she so beautifully explored - the fluidity of history and time - is front and center of this book as well and, if possible, even more fully realized. Those who have read Kate Atkinson's book Life After Life will note an almost eerie symmetry (although this book was published in Germany in 2012, mere months before the Atkinson book.)The premise derives from the German saying, "Es ist noch nict aller Tage Abend", translated to, "It isn't over until the end of all days." Starting at the turn of the 20th century, a baby girl has lost her brief battle with life during the Habsburg Empire. But what if she had lived?  The next of the five interwoven books imagines her as a poor and despondent teenager in Vienna during post World War I Vienna, where - again - she meets up with death. In the next rendition, she has survived into adulthood and is now a fervent Communist until her rendezvous with death. And so on.Unlike the Atkinson book, Erpenbeck's novel goes beyond the "wind back the tape and let's see what happens" scenario. For one thing, there are Intermezzos between each rendition, which prods the reader to see how one minute or one move could make a world of different. There's something more organic about all of it.We never - or, at least, not to the final book - learn the name of the characters. They are called daughter or mother or grandmother.  That is a deliberate choice on the part of Ms. Erpenbeck; in Shakespeare's words, "We are poor players who strut and fret our last hour on the stage."  They could be any family.  They could be us.  A paraphrase of the title is used in the first book: "A day on which a life comes to end is still far from being the end of all days." Jenny Erpenbeck's book is cobbled together around Hegel's truism: "The truth is the whole." In each section, we see part of the truth: what may have happened, what happened from a certain character's perspective, what may not have happened at all.  Only until we get to the end do we understand the importance of continuity: (to paraphrase the author), we carry within us a vast dark land, all the stories our mother never told us or that she hid from us...all the stories our mothers never heard of or never knew.  In a lifetime, regimes rise and fall, people vanish or fade away, material goods find new owners. Yet life goes on.There is incredible beauty in the prose, translated to perfection by Susan Bernofsky, such as, "Her body is a city. Her heart is a large shady square, her fingers pedestrians, her hair the light of streetlamps, her knees two rows of buildings. She tries to give people footpaths..."  From the almost folkloric or mythic feel of the first book to the more strident tone of the third to the achingly poignant tone of the final book, Ms. Erpenbeck flirts with the notion of possibility, fate, and death.  She is an exciting writer who deserves the widest audience possible.

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*Product available on Desertcart Peru*
*Store origin: PE*
*Last updated: 2026-04-25*