Exploring Switzerland: 10 books from Heidi’s homeland

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Switzerland. The land of Heidi, one of my absolute childhood favourites, and yes she is on the list. I do wonder if that would be one of those books that hit different when you’re all grown up? I don’t think I’ll re-read Heidi though, because there is an absolute wealth of interesting choices to pick from. The country’s four official languages have given rise to an incredible range of stories, from unsettling existential novels to contemporary reflections on migration and belonging.

Here are my suggestions for 10 books to read from Switzerland

A list of books to read from Switzerland

Great fear on the mountain

Author: Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz
First published: 1925
Original title: La grande peur dans la montagne
Genre: Classics / Horror

Let us start with a classic piece of Swiss horror.

Feed is running low in a rural village in Switzerland. The town council meets to decide whether or not to ascend a chimerical mountain in order to access the open pastures that have enough grass to “feed seventy animals all summer long.” The elders of the town protest, warning of the dangers and the dreadful lore that enfolds the mountain passageways like thick fog.

They’ve seen it all before, reckoning with the loss of animals and men who have tried to reach the pastures nearly twenty years ago. The younger men don’t listen, making plans to set off on their journey despite all warnings. Strange things happen. Spirits wrestle with headstrong young men. As the terror of life on the mountain builds, Ramuz’s writing captures the rural dialog and mindsets of the men.

Jakob von Gunten

Author: Robert Walser
First published: 1909
Original title: Jakob von Gunten
Genre: Literary fiction / Classics

Anoother Swiss classic to try would be this one by Robert Walser, one of the quiet geniuses of twentieth-century literature. Walser wrote a range of short stories, essays and four novels, of which Jakob von Gunten is widely recognized as the finest.

It tells the story of a seventeen-year-old runaway from an old family who enrolls in a school for servants. The Institute, run by the domineering Herr Benjamenta and his beautiful but ailing sister, is a deeply mysterious place. The faculty lies asleep in a single room. The students though subject to fierce discipline, come and go at will. Jakob, an irrepressibly subversive presence, keeps a journal in which he records his quirky impressions of the school as well as his own quickly changing enthusiasms and uncertainties, deliberations and dreams. And in the end, as the Institute itself dissolves around him like a dream, he steps out boldly to explore still-unimagined worlds.

The Spirits of the Earth

Author: Catherine Colomb
First published: 1953
Original Title: Les Esprits de la terre
Genre: Literary fiction

Swiss novelist Catherine Colomb is known as one of the most unusual and inventive francophone novelists of the twentieth century. Fascinated by the processes of memory and consciousness, she has been compared to that of Virginia Woolf and Marcel Proust. The Spirits of the Earth is the first English translation of Colomb’s work.

The Spirits of the Earth is at heart a family drama, set at the Fraidaigue château, along the shores of Lake Geneva, and in the Maison d’en Haut country mansion, located in the hills above the lake. In these luxe locales, readers encounter upper-class characters with faltering incomes, parvenues, and even ghosts. Throughout, Colomb builds a psychologically penetrating and bold story in which the living and the dead intermingle and in which time itself is a mystery.

I’m not Stiller

Author: Max Frisch
First published: 1954
Original Title: Stiller
Genre: Philosophical fiction

Arrested and imprisoned in a small Swiss town, a prisoner begins this book with an exclamation: “I’m not Stiller!” He claims that his name is Jim White, that he has been jailed under false charges and under the wrong identity. To prove he is who he claims to be, he confesses to three unsolved murders and recalls in great detail an adventuresome life in America and Mexico among cowboys and peasants, in back alleys and docks. He is consumed by “the morbid impulse to convince,” but no one believes him.

This is a harrowing account part Kafka, part Camus of the power of self-deception and the freedom that ultimately lies in self-acceptance. Simultaneously haunting and humorous, I’m Not Stiller has come to be recognized as “one of the major post-war works of fiction” and a masterpiece of German literature.

The Pledge

Author: Friedrich Dürrenmatt
First published: 1958
Original title: Das Versprechen
Genre: Crime Fiction, Psychological Thriller

Set in a small town in Switzerland, The Pledge centers around the murder of a young girl and the detective who promises the victim’s mother he will find the perpetrator. After deciding the wrong man has been arrested for the crime, the detective lays a trap for the real killer, with all the patience of a master fisherman. But cruel turns of plot conspire to make him pay dearly for his pledge. Here Friedrich Dürrenmatt conveys his brilliant ear for dialogue and a devastating sense of timing and suspense.

Both a gripping crime story and a meditation on the randomness of life, The Pledge was adapted into several films, including The Pledge (2001) starring Jack Nicholson.

Elefant

Author: Martin Suter
First published: 2017
Original title: Elefant
Genre: Contemporary

I chose this. Check out my review here.

What would you do if you woke up to see a living, breathing, tiny, glowing, pink elephant? If you’re anything like Schoch, who lives on the streets of Zürich and is decidedly down on his luck, you might well think it’s time to put away the bottle before your hallucinations get any stranger, and go back to sleep.

But what if the tiny pink elephant is still there when you wake up? And clearly needs someone to take care of it? And what if you discover that it’s been created through genetic engineering, by a group of scientists who just want to use it to get rich and don’t care about the elephant’s welfare? And that they’re in cahoots with a circus and will stop at nothing to get it back?

What if this little elephant is about to change your life? Should I let it change mine?

The enigma of room 622

Author: Joël Dicker
First published: 2020
Original title: L’Énigme de la chambre 622
Genre: Mystery / Thriller

A matryoshka doll of a mystery built with the precision of a Swiss watch. Joel Dicker presents a diabolically addictive thriller where a love triangle, a power struggle, shocking betrayals and dangerous envy play out against the backdrop of a not so quiet Switzerland.

One night in December, a corpse is found in Room 622 of the Hotel Verbier, a luxury hotel in the Swiss Alps. A police investigation begins without definite end, and public interest wanes with the passage of time. Years later, the writer Joel Dicker, Switzerland’s most famous literary ingenue, arrives at that same hotel to recover from a bad breakup, mourn the death of his longtime publisher, and begin his next novel. Little does Joel know that his expertise in the art of the thriller will come in handy when he finds himself investigating the crime. He’ll need a Watson, of course: in this case, that would be Scarlett, the beautiful guest and aspiring novelist from the next room, who joins in the search while he tries to solve another puzzle: the plot of his next book. 

Why the child is cooking in the polenta

Author: Aglaja Veteranyi
First published: 1999
Original Title: Warum das Kind in der Polenta kocht
Genre: Contemporary / Magical realism

A nomadic family of circus performers, refugees from Romania, travels through Europe and Africa by caravan. The mother’s death-defying act causes constant anxiety for her two daughters, who voice their fears through a grisly communal fairy tale about a child being cooked alive in polenta. But their real life is no less of a dark fable, and one that seems just as unlikely to have a happy ending.

Aglaja Veteranyi was a Swiss writer of Romanian origin, from a family of Romanian and Hungarian descent. She was born in Bucharest but eventually settled in Switzerland with her family of touring circus performers.

Fly away pigeon

Author: Melinda Nadj Abonji
First published: 2010
Original title: Tauben fliegen auf
Genre: Literary fiction / Contemporary

Fly Away, Pigeon tells the heart-wrenching story of a family torn between emigration and immigration and paints evocative portraits of the former Yugoslavia and modern-day Switzerland.  In this novel, Melinda Nadj Abonji interweaves two narrative strands, recounting the history of three generations of the Kocsis family and chronicling their hard-won assimilation. Originally part of Serbia’s Hungarian-speaking minority in the Vojvodina, the Kocsis family immigrates to Switzerland in the early 1970s when their hometown is still part of the Yugoslav republic.

Parents Miklos and Rosza land in Switzerland knowing just one word—“work.”  And after three years of backbreaking, menial work, both legal and illegal, they are finally able to obtain visas for their two young daughters, Ildiko and Nomi, who safely join them. However, for all their efforts to adapt and assimilate they still must endure insults and prejudice from members of their new community and helplessly stand by as the friends and family members they left behind suffer the maelstrom of the Balkan War.

With tough-minded nostalgia and compassionate realism, Fly Away, Pigeon illustrates how much pain and loss even the most successful immigrant stories contain.

Heidi

Author: Johanna Spyri
First published: 1880
Original Title: Heidi
Genre: Historical fiction / Children’s classic

I just couldn’t leave out my childhood favourite from this list, now could I? If you haven’t read this, I still think you should!

No exploration of Swiss literature would be complete without Heidi. This beloved classic follows the adventures of a young girl living with her grandfather in the Swiss Alps, celebrating themes of nature, kindness, and the simplicity of rural life. Spyri’s timeless story has been translated into countless languages and adapted into numerous films and television series, cementing its place as a cornerstone of children’s literature worldwide.

Join me, and read a book from Switzerland

There you have it. Ten books offering a journey through Switzerland’s literary landscape, from serene alpine villages to the complexities of identity and migration, from dark psychological tales to lighter contemporary reads. Whether you’re drawn to introspective novels or twisty mysteries, I hope something on this list catches your eye. I know something has caught mine, can you guess which one?

Have you read any of these titles? Which one sounds the most intriguing? Share your thoughts and suggestions for other Swiss reads in the comments!

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