Where to Start with Nelly Sachs
Nelly Sachs was a German-Swedish poet who fled Nazi Germany in 1940 and spent the rest of her life in Stockholm. She shared the 1966 Nobel Prize in Literature for her body of work confronting the Holocaust, transmuting grief and exile into poetry that draws on Jewish mysticism and reaches toward spiritual transcendence.
Start here
O the Chimneys: Selected Poems
Nelly Sachs · 150 pages · 1967 · Moderate
Themes: Holocaust, exile, suffering, transcendence
This is the collection that introduced Nelly Sachs to the English-speaking world, and it remains the essential entry point into her work.
Why Start Here
The title poem opens with one of the most shattering lines in twentieth-century poetry: “O the chimneys / On the ingeniously devised habitations of death.” Sachs does not flinch from the horror, but she refuses to let it be only horror. Her imagery, smoke, stars, dust, moths, creates a spiritual geography that holds grief and transcendence simultaneously.
The selection spans her major collections and shows the full range of her voice: from direct lamentation to dense mystical imagery drawn from Jewish Kabbalah. At around 150 pages it is concentrated enough to read in one sustained sitting, but rich enough to return to again and again. This is where poetry proves it can do what prose cannot.
What to Expect
Short, intense poems that demand slow reading. Dense imagery that rewards re-reading. A consistent preoccupation with smoke, ash, stars, and the souls of the murdered, not as metaphor but as the literal substance of her world. Bring patience and willingness to sit with difficulty.