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by Gabriele Tergit (Author), Sophie Duvernoy (Translator)
Three generations of German Jewish family undergo the tumult, upheaval, and brutality of nineteenth- and twentieth-century history in this panoramic and skillfully nuanced family drama, rich with gossip and incident, capturing a Germany now lost to time.
Gabriele Tergit (1894-1982), born Elise Hirschmann, was a German novelist and reporter. She began writing newspaper articles in the early 1920s under her pseudonym and eventually rose to prominence at the Berliner Tageblatt as one of Berlin's best-known court reporters. Her first novel, Käsebier Takes Berlin (available from NYRB Classics) cemented her reputation as a brilliant social satirist of the Weimar Republic. In 1933 she narrowly evaded arrest by the Nazis, fleeing to Prague and Palestine before settling in London with her husband and son. Alongside essays and articles, she wrote a number of books of fiction and nonfiction, including two novels, unpublished in Tergit's lifetime, that were recently published in Germany to critical acclaim: So war's eben (That's How It Was) and Der erste Zug nach Berlin (The First Train to Berlin).
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