German Post-War Fiction
With the writing of my novella Love’s Harvest I have done a tremendous amount of research into
Germany, the ethnic Germans of the Volga and Sudentenland regions, and
ex-pat/exiled Germans. The research which has introduced me to several
German-language authors, and has added to my To Be Read stack of books.
Some of the more well-known German and German speaking writers
are Thomas Mann, Hermann Hesse, and Hans Werner Richter. Heinrich Theodor Boll
was an important post-WWII, German writer who most Americans are probably
unfamiliar with. Winner of the 1972 Nobel Prize for Literature, Boll came from
a pacifist, anti-Nazi family. Conscripted into the Wehrmacht, the author was captured
by the Americans in 1945 and sent to a POW camp.
A more recently discovered German writer is Andrea Maria
Schenkel. Her debut novel, The Murder
Farm was published in 2006 in Germany. Picked up by Hachette, the English
version was released in 2014. The book is not a traditional mystery in any
sense of the word. A fictionalization of an unsolved murder case that happened
in Bavaria in 1922, the book has no detective or formal investigation. Instead,
the author weaves together eye-witness accounts, third-person narratives, and
incomplete case files. It is up to the reader to determine who killed the
victims. Ms. Schenkel has since published several more novels, some of which
have been translated into English.
Americans can be an isolated people. We have everything we
need and have no need to look beyond our borders. It has been an interesting
journey for me to reach out into the literary field of another country.
Have you read any translated fiction or non-fiction books? If
not, you might want to consider it.
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