This riveting war story introduces us to the beautiful Kate Zweig, the English widow of a German surgeon, and Claus Murphy, an exiled American with German roots--two lovers with complicated... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Paul Griner skillfully writes a mysterious story filled with haunting realism about two individuals who become lovers each of whom had lived what seemed a lifetime before they met. Their lives are complicated by their past histories which proves they are survivors but it also creates conflicts which may become their undoing in the end. The author's sparse prose is strikingly sharp and direct, creating a jarring tension and exciting anticipation in the reader who expects some malevolent force to enter like a cold wind on a dark winter's day. The reader anticipates the unexpected at every turn of the page. Civil wars had broken out in various countries even before the end of World War One and now President Woodrow Wilson had a Fourteen Point Peace Plan. Soldiers who spoke Polish or Lithuanian or German came through Wilno where the small field hospital where Kate Zweig worked as a nurse continued its mission despite limited equipment and barely enough coal to properly sterilize the surgical instruments ... In part One, Kate Zweig lives in Wilno, East Prussia in 1919 with her mother-in-law and husband who was a surgeon but is now blind from wounds sustained in World War One. The author's descriptions of life after the war are filled with the realities of privation but a sort of lingering optimism exists which only humans who survived the unspeakable horrors of war can manage to sustain. They hold onto the hope of building a better future. The family moved to Hamburg where life was a bit easier but nonetheless still difficult. The description of Kate receiving a nearly new pair of leather shoes from her mother-in-law and Kate's stopping at a soup kitchen which would make her husband feel ashamed were particularly realistic and effective. In Part Two, it is 1944 and Kate lives in London with a new set of friends one of whom is an American named Claus (Charles) who has German roots. There is a vagueness as to how and why she left Hamburg, then spent time living in France where her husband's family had been from and escaped to London to free herself from the Nazis. Claus had been imprisoned in the past on what appeared to be trumped up charges. Both Kate and Claus had mysterious and complicated past histories each of whom could plausibly explain it away. However, under the current political climate it placed them in jeopardy, given the feelings about anyone with German ancestry or connections. The author manages to create an eery suspense and drama as the lives of these two strangers who become lovers entangle. The reader is taken to a precipice, to a ledge where the author provides a totally surprising and explosive ending which leaves the reader stunned and breathless but completely satisfied. This book is a gem which has many hidden depths and layers that the reader more fully appreciates only at the end. There is a lingering feeling of sadness which remains long after finishing the book. Erika Borsos [pepper flower]
Best Book of the Year
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
This novel is historical fiction with a bit of espionage spy mystery thrown in to make it as good a book as you will read this year. The novel is told through two characters: Kate, the "German Woman" and nurse and Claus aka Charles Murphy, an American film-maker. The book starts as Kate and her husband doctor are fleeing the Russians at the end of WWI. They worked together in German field hospitals during the war. He was a German doctor trained in England and she an English nurse who followed him at the outbreak of the war. The second part of the book follows Claus, an American, making films for the English and being an industrious warden. The two characters meet at the end of WWII as the VI's are ravaging London. Those are the details. The big picture is far more intriguing. Nothing is sure throughout the novel except the gruesome dervastation and destruction wrought by war. Be it WWI or WWII, war devastates the common people at home and in occupioed areas even more than the soldiers - whether home is Germany or England and whether the occupiers are German or English or any other nation in those positions. Depradation and tragedy occurs on both sides and Mr. Giner takes black and white and throws them out the window. This novel only considers variations in gray. "Nothing is as it seems" applies to the two main characters. As every page turns, the reader learns something else about both - or seems to. The mystery/espionage part of the book is deciphering what is real, what is not and what is wartime paranoia. What is excellent historical fiction also has considerable elements of an excellent spy mystery. This book is unique. As it explores the horrors of war's homefronts and aftermath, refugees and dispossessed, it is telling a compelling story that includes a very good mystery. Or does it? This book is very very highly recommended.
Beautiful, Gripping Novel
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Griner's novel is an amazing read, one of the best contemporary novels I've read in years. As someone who isn't terribly familiar with the history of either World War I or II, I found the historical elements to be easily woven into the plot and in no way distracting or didactic. The prose is beautiful, the characters are well-developed, and the plot is gripping. I strongly disagree with earlier reviewers who found the two halves of the novel to be disconnected from one another. As far as the claim that the novel is explicit in its descriptions of the horrors of war ---- well, it is, but I found it to be an integral part of the novel's setting and not overkill. The love stories that tie together the two halves of the novel are poignant and real. I highly recommend this novel as a summer read. It will also make an excellent gift to anyone interested in good writing, WWI/II, or love stories. I plan on gifting it multiple times this coming holiday season.
Highly Recommended
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
The German Woman is a moving story about love, war and intrigue. The first part of the book centers around Nurse Kate Zweig and her doctor husband Horst in the midst of World War I. Griner artfully uses the plot to construct realistic images of the brutalities of war. When we move to Part II, we jump 25 years to 1944 and war torn London. Although Kate is still with us, Horst is gone and we are swept up in the story of Claus Morgan, an American expatriate, film maker and undercover agent for The Ministry of Information. The two fall in love, despite each sharing concerns of the other's involvement with the enemy. The characters are well developed and the scenes really come alive. If you have read Griner's short stories, you will see similarities to the plot twists in "The Thief" and "Boxes." The novel is reminiscent of Pat Barker's war series with the same intensity and psychological depth. Highly recommended.
A finely constructed, beautifully written novel about the moral complexities of life and survival in
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Intense content, vivid imagery and meticulous research. The book is rich in historical detail and immerses the reader in two wartime periods: post-WWI in occupied Germany, and end of WW2 during the bombings of London. The first part of the book forcefully describes the chaotic and surreal nature of events as home forces retreat and foreign forces occupy; the post-war period of starvation and the desolation it brings; the demoralizing arrogance of occupying forces; and the daily bartering of goods and soul needed to survive. The second part of the book, at the end of WWII, brings to life the shifting emotional response of a population enduring frequent, unpredictable terror -- the impossibility of living in a constant state of fear, the consequent deadening and reawakening of intense emotions, the awareness of imminent danger breaking constantly through to the surface of daily living. The author is extremely skillful in conveying the passage of time -- the world as described in Part 2 is completely different in feel from that described in Part 1; this is accomplished through countless, detailed descriptions of daily life that enable the reader to feel differences across the two eras -- the milk-carrier's nag; the iron cookstove; a woman sponging off the black line on the back of her leg, drawn to imitate the seam of a stocking; the memory of raspberries in normal times; a child with rickets; a watch ticking on a severed arm. The reader is drenched in the atmosphere of the book's places and times. Throughout, the day-to-day lives of Kate Zweig and her lover Claus illustrate the difficult practical and moral choices that people must navigate in times of war, or of terror -- some images in the book, and some of the responses to perceived "treason" are reminiscent of reactions in the US post 9/11. Questions of identity -- citizenship vs. humanity, self alone and self in relationship with others, the layers of meaning in how we act and what we choose to reveal of ourselves -- are explored in the context of extreme circumstances. The book is best read slowly and with attention to detail. It is not a comfortable book -- war is horrible, and the author doesn't spare us. However, the language is beautiful, and the construction of the book is intricate -- a close reading pays off. The comparison to Graham Greene, both stylistically and in terms of the examination of morality and identity, is apt. I was also reminded of themes and preoccupations of C.P. Snow, Anthony Powell, Pat Barker, and early 20th-century British poetry. Though these themes are set in a historical context, I found myself thinking often of what it must have been like in recent years, and today, to live in Baghdad, Mosul, Kabul, and other areas where civilians are affected by war and daily life becomes a surreal combination of normalcy and random terror. Highly recommended.
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