Where to Start with Peter Handke: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Peter Handke — whether to begin with A Sorrow Beyond Dreams or The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick. A complete reading guide.
Peter Handke (born 1942) is the Austrian novelist, playwright, and screenwriter who became one of the most influential and controversial figures in post-war German-language literature — influential for his experiments with dramatic form (his early plays included Offending the Audience, a theatrical provocation that attacked the conventions of theatre while constituting a theatre piece itself) and controversial for his political statements about the Yugoslav Wars. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2019, a decision that generated significant public debate. His prose work — especially A Sorrow Beyond Dreams (1972) — is among the most formally distinguished in modern European literature.
Where to Start: A Sorrow Beyond Dreams (1972)
The essential Handke — and one of the finest examples of literary memoir in any European language. In November 1971, Handke’s mother Maria took her own life at age fifty-one after years of depression. Within weeks of her death, Handke began writing about her life. The result is a short book (about a hundred pages) that is simultaneously a personal memoir, a formal meditation on the limits of language, and an act of grief that refuses the consolations grief usually seeks.
The book’s formal argument is that biography — the conventional means of representing a life — inevitably falsifies the specific person, reducing her to recognisable types and social categories. Handke’s mother grew up in rural Austria in the 1920s and 1930s, married, had children, fell into depression: the narrative is almost formulaic. Handke interrupts it repeatedly to examine the clichés that are threatening to replace his specific mother with ‘a woman like this.’ The examination of how literary convention and social expectation erase the individual is the book’s deepest subject.
What remains — beneath the formal intervention — is an act of genuine love: a son who could not save his mother trying to see her truly, in writing, as she was.
The Goalie’s Anxiety at the Penalty Kick (1970)
Handke’s alienation novel — a former goalkeeper who commits a murder and waits, in linguistic disconnection, for something he cannot name. More demanding than A Sorrow Beyond Dreams; for readers who want Handke’s experimental fiction. Standalone.
Reading Peter Handke
Begin with A Sorrow Beyond Dreams — it is the more personally rooted and accessible of his major works. Read The Goalie’s Anxiety at the Penalty Kick after for his fiction and his formal experiments with consciousness and language.
For the full Peter Handke bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Peter Handke author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Peter Handke?
A Sorrow Beyond Dreams (1972) is the recommended starting point — Handke's short, intensely written account of his mother's life and suicide, combining personal memoir with formal meditation on the inadequacy of language to represent a life. One of the most formally interesting works of literary non-fiction in the German-language tradition; relatively accessible compared to his more experimental work. The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick is the better starting point for readers specifically interested in his fiction.
What is A Sorrow Beyond Dreams about?
A Sorrow Beyond Dreams is Handke's account of his mother's life — her childhood in rural Austria, her marriage, her depression, and her suicide at fifty-one — written immediately after her death. The book is equally an account of the difficulty of writing such a thing: Handke interrupts his narrative repeatedly to examine the clichés and literary conventions that threaten to falsify his mother's experience, the inadequacy of language to represent an individual life, and the difference between the social construction of 'a woman like this' and the specific irreducible person who was his mother.
What is The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick about?
The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick (1970) is Handke's novel about Josef Bloch, a former goalkeeper turned construction worker, who murders a cinema cashier seemingly without motivation and then travels to the Austrian countryside to wait for something — the police, an encounter, a revelation — that never quite arrives. The novel is a study in alienation and linguistic disconnection: Bloch's perception of the world has become defamiliarised, and the novel mimics this by describing ordinary objects and events in ways that make them strange.
How difficult is Peter Handke to read?
Handke's range is considerable. A Sorrow Beyond Dreams is relatively accessible — personally rooted, formally self-aware but not impenetrable. The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick is more demanding: the alienation it describes is partly enacted by the prose, and readers looking for conventional plot or character development will find it frustrating. Handke is a major figure in post-war European literature; his Nobel Prize in 2019 was controversial for reasons unrelated to his writing. The writing itself rewards serious attention.

