1. Introduction Peter Bichsel’s short prose piece Kindergeschichte (1964), from his seminal collection Eigentlich möchte Frau Blum den Milchmann kennenlernen , is a masterclass in minimalist storytelling. At first glance, it appears to be a simple, nostalgic recollection of childhood. However, beneath its unadorned surface lies a sophisticated meditation on the nature of memory, the inescapable influence of the past on the present, and the fundamental problem of how we construct our own identities. Bichsel does not write a sentimental tale for children; he writes a philosophical story for adults about the impossibility of truly returning to childhood. 2. Summary of the Plot The story is a first-person monologue. The adult narrator attempts to tell a "kindergeschichte" (a story from his childhood). He recalls a specific, seemingly trivial incident: standing in a hallway as a young boy, putting on his rubber boots to go outside. He remembers being unable to get the boots on because he had already put on his trousers, and the boots wouldn’t fit over the cuffs. The memory ends not with a resolution, but with the boy calling for his mother.
The story’s deeper meaning lies in the act of telling. Why does the narrator tell this story? Not to entertain, but to try to understand himself. He is searching for the root of his adult identity. The fact that he fails to find a clean answer is the point. kindergeschichte peter bichsel