"Effingers" by Gabriele Tergit is a novel well worth your time if you enjoy family sagas, have any interest in Germany between Bismarck and Hitler, or want to immerse yourself in the diverse lives of the German Jewish bourgeoisie prior to their uprooting and destruction.

"Effingers" is also a Berlin novel, one that provides a quite different picture of the city than that displayed in "Berlin Alexanderplatz". That contrast stems from the differing class settings of the two novels.

Towards the end of the novel, Zionism as an ideology and settlement in Mandatory Palestine as possible option emerge as themes . Those looking for straightforward prefiguring of their own beliefs on these matters will be disappointed, but those seeking a novel's sensitive treatment of the uncertainties, hopes, and fears of individuals and families under pressure will be rewarded.

#Books #Novels #Effingers #GabrieleTergit #GermanLiterature #20thCenturyLiterature #JewishLiterature

https://www.complete-review.com/reviews/deutsch/tergitg2.htm

We are currently compiling a collection of German-language climate fiction novels. So we have a question for the community: Which texts come to mind for you? #climate-change-fiction #CLS #ecocriticism #climate-fiction #digitalhumanities #cli-fi #germanliterature #climate-change (1/2)

I've recently finished Gabriele Tergit's 1931 "Käsebier Takes Berlin" (Käsebier erobert den Kurfürstendamm) in Sophie Duvernoy's translation.

I've got mixed feelings about the novel.

On the one hand, the organization of the narrative struck me as clumsy both on a large scale and in certain details. Overall, the journalistic satire that dominates the first half does not fit well with the property speculation plot salient in the second half. At times, the abundance of characters combines with some minimal attribution of dialogue to make parts of the novel difficult to follow. I can imagine impatient readers throwing the book aside.

Yet one should resist that impatient impulse, since the novel will reward the reader who perseveres. Anybody interested in Weimar Germany in general and Berlin in particular will profit from a reading. The flip side of the abundance of characters is Tergit's multiple snapshots of the cityscapes, media, interiors, outfits, and consumer goods as the 30s begin in Berlin. This aspect of the novel invites a contrast and compare exercise with "Berlin Alexanderplatz".

Tergit's background as a journalist helped her in both in the satire of the press and also in her acute observation of social climbing and pretension. This perspicacity coupled with her talent as a maker of fiction to create the loathsome Willi Frächter. This character will not only stick in the memory but, sadly, also be all too recognizable to observers of contemporary culture.

Readers today will inevitably have the coming of Hitler in mind as the novel unfolds. Of course, the journalists' mocking use of "Heil und Sieg und fette Beute", translated as "Heil and Sieg and catch a fat one", is now tinged with an irony that Tergit could not have grasped at the time of publication, although only two years later she fled Germany after a narrow escape from the thugs of the SA.

Today, we might do well to consider the parallels between the media of our own day and Frächter's gleeful transformation of the "Berliner Rundschau":

>> What you call dumbing down, Mr. Miermann, I call blooming. <<

I'm going to give Tergit's 1951 family saga "The Effingers" a try. The idea of a "Jewish 'Buddenbrooks' " I find hard to resist. I'm not expecting her to be another Thomas Mann, but it's not unreasonable to hope that her novelist's technique had developed in the two decades following "Käsebier Takes Berlin".

#Books #Bookstodon #GabrieleTergit #KäsebierTakesBerlin #KäsebierErobertDenKurfürstendamm
#Fiction #Novel #GermanLiterature #Berlin #20thCenturyLiterature #1930sLiterature #WeimarRepublic #Newspapers #Press #Media #Journalism

https://www.nyrb.com/products/kasebier-takes-berlin

Käsebier Takes Berlin

Rental Family (2025)

An American actor in Tokyo struggles to find purpose until he lands an unusual gig: working for a Japanese 'rental family' agency, playing stand-in roles for strangers. As he immerses himself in his clients' worlds, he begins to form genuine bonds that blur the lines between performance and reality.

🌙 New: "Das Brot" by Wolfgang Borchert – a haunting post-war minimalist masterpiece about hunger, lies & quiet sacrifice.
Read the full German text with interactive hover translations, audio, historical context & quiz!
Perfect for German learners 📖🇩🇪
https://learnoutlive.com/das-brot-wolfgang-borchert/
#LearnGerman #DeutschLernen #GermanLiterature #WolfgangBorchert #Trümmerliteratur
Das Brot - Wolfgang Borchert

After sharing Borchert's classic Die Küchenuhr recently, I'm excited to bring you another of his stories. "Das Brot" is perfect for language learners:

LearnOutLive

I've just finished "Michael Kohlhaas", the 1810 novella by Heinrich von Kleist.

I think I'm right in saying that this work is well known throughout the German speaking world but is of much lesser renown amongst English speakers, even though allusions such as that in E.L. Doctorow's "Ragtime" show that it is not completely obscure.

For those unfamiliar with the novella, Wikipedia summarizes the plot as showing

>>the wrongs done to horse trader Michael Kohlhaas by a minor aristocrat. His attempts to obtain redress through the legal system are thwarted by the aristocrat's connections. Kohlhaas gathers sympathisers to capture the miscreant, which escalates into a violent campaign against towns that take in the fleeing noble. Kohlhaas is captured and sentenced to death. Just before being executed Kohlhaas achieves some revenge by swallowing a written prophecy of great personal concern to the regional ruler. <<

Going beyond the plot summary to the actual work will afford the reader the sense of being lost in a set of arcane legal processes that defy not only justice but intelligibility as well.

That juridical labyrinth is no doubt what appealed to Kafka, prompting him to give a public reading of the novella in Prague.

Martin Greenberg, the translator of the edition I read, was drawn to Kleist by his previous work on Kafka. Greenberg notes how "Michael Kohlhaas" presages "The Castle" but also writes testily of how the "realism" of the novella is disrupted by the "shadowy Gothic fantasticness" of the conclusion, which he deems "unsatisfactory".

Greenberg was writing in 1960, when a critical climate of modernism was less sympathetic to the introduction of a disguised gypsy prophetess as plot device than was the romantic era in which saw the publication of"Michael Kohlhaas".

More than half a century after Greenberg, in a post-postmodernist age, readers might be more receptive to von Kleist's melange of the legalistic, the traditional, and the fantastic. I found Kohlhaas's determination for his claim on two horses to be vindicated, leading from serving legal writs to proclaiming himself the viceroy of the archangel Michael as his followers set cities aflame, and culminating in his acceptance of the death penalty with his refusal to disclose a prophecy of a dynasty's doom -- I found all this absorbing and provocative!

#Books #HeinrichVonKleist #MichaelKohlhaas #GermanLiterature #Novellas #NineteethCenturyLiterature
#RomanticLiterature

Image -- On the Gallows, from Woodcuts for Heinrich von Kleist’s Michael Kohlhaas -- 1953 -- Jacob Pins: Jerusalem Print Workshop -- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

Unknown novel by writer who charted Hitler’s rise becomes German bestseller

Sebastian Haffner’s love story set in final days of Weimar Republic published more than nine decades after it was written

The Guardian

I have never read anything by Heinrich von Kleist.

Should I start with "Michael Kohlhaas"?

https://www.publicbooks.org/the-kleist-we-need/

#Literature #HeinrichVonKleist #GermanLiterature #MichaelKohlhaas
#Novellas #Books

The Kleist We Need - Public Books

Heinrich von Kleist teaches how to resist heteronormativity, as well as how to imagine gender fluidity and a less restrictive masculinity.

Public Books

“If a famous painting changed owners, if a precious manuscript was sold at auction, if an old palace burned down, if the bearer of an aristocratic name was involved in a scandal, the readers of many thousands of feature articles at once learned the facts. What is more, on that same day or by the next day at the latest they received an additional dose of anecdotal, historical, psychological, erotic, and other stuff on the catchword of the moment.”

https://library.hrmtc.com/2025/07/01/if-a-famous-painting-changed-owners-if-a-precious-manuscript-was-sold-at-auction-if-an-old-palace-burned-down-if-the-bearer-of-an-aristocratic-name-was-involved-in-a-scandal-the-readers-of-many/

#additionalDose #anecdotal #aristocraticName #atTheLatest #bearer #book #burnedDown #catchword #changedOwners #ClassicAmericanLiterature #ClassicLiteratureFiction #Classics #erotic #facts #famousPainting #featureArticles #games #GamesFiction #GermanLiterature #germany #hermannHesse #historical #involvedInAScandal #learned #literaryFiction #magisterLudi #manyThousands #moment #nextDay #oldPalace #otherStuff #preciousManuscript #psychological #quote #readers #received #sameDay #Scholars #ScholarsGermanyFiction #soldAtAuction #TheGlassBeadGame