Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico review – an object lesson in hollow hipsterism
An expat couple carefully curate their lives through plants and Radiohead LPs in this deliciously pessimistic chronicle of gentrifying BerlinAnna and Tom are expats living in Berlin in the 2010s. As freelance digital creatives, their Neukölln flat is affordable, their windowsills are plant-lined, their armchairs are Danish mahogany. Meanwhile, their social lives are curated around gallery openings for art they do not much care about, cooking and the occasional attempt at an orgy.Perfection is Berlin-based Italian writer Vincenzo Latronico’s fourth novel, his first to be translated into English, here by Sophie Hughes. The book artfully lays out detail upon detail of Anna and Tom’s quotidian existence in forensic, deadpan style, from the limited edition of Radiohead’s In Rainbows facing outwards in their LP collection to their reclaimed-wood dining table, lain with raw cotton cloth. Theirs is a life defined through a keen outward projection of taste. Over a period of about 10 years, as Berlin becomes increasingly gentrified, we observe this couple through their many possessions. Continue reading...
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An expat couple carefully curate their lives through plants and Radiohead LPs in this deliciously pessimistic chronicle of gentrifying Berlin
Anna and Tom are expats living in Berlin in the 2010s. As freelance digital creatives, their Neukölln flat is affordable, their windowsills are plant-lined, their armchairs are Danish mahogany. Meanwhile, their social lives are curated around gallery openings for art they do not much care about, cooking and the occasional attempt at an orgy.
Perfection is Berlin-based Italian writer Vincenzo Latronico’s fourth novel, his first to be translated into English, here by Sophie Hughes. The book artfully lays out detail upon detail of Anna and Tom’s quotidian existence in forensic, deadpan style, from the limited edition of Radiohead’s In Rainbows facing outwards in their LP collection to their reclaimed-wood dining table, lain with raw cotton cloth. Theirs is a life defined through a keen outward projection of taste. Over a period of about 10 years, as Berlin becomes increasingly gentrified, we observe this couple through their many possessions. Continue reading...