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The Way to the Border

Ingvild Richardsen Grete Weil

Discovered at last: Grete Weil’s outstanding novel about everyday life and resistance under the Nazis

‘The Way to the Border’ came to be during 1944/45 in Amsterdam while the persecuted German writer, Grete Weil, was exiled and living in hiding. Not only was this the Jewish writer’s first novel but it had never previously found its way into the public domain and so its publication is truly a revelation. The writing, taken from autobiographical material and then fictionalised, recounts the love story of Grete Weil and her husband, Edgar Weil, tragically and shockingly murdered in 1941 at Mauthausen, the concentration camp. But it is also a story of escape and the development of a political awareness in those from a social milieu traditionally one-step removed from anything political. Here is a rare description of the everyday impact that the Nazi regime had, right from the word go, on families and institutions alike.

The action is set in 1936 and tells of the escape of the young Jewish woman, Monika Merton, whose husband has already died at Dachau. She is herself being pursued by the Gestapo and so heads for the border to cross into Austria, always travelling on foot or on skis. Her travelling companion is an acquaintance of hers, the young poet, Andreas von Cornides. While they are resting at a mountain refuge, she tells him her story. This includes events from her life in Munich and the crazy world of 1930s Berlin, of her love for her cousin, Klaus, her marriage, her travels and her ups and downs, and her work at an alternative school in rural Bavaria until the Nazis came to power and anti-Semitism put an end to so many life chances, indeed lives. This is a highly significant work of German literature, unusually accessible, both impressive and touching, clever and insightful.

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Published 2022-08-25 by C.H.Beck , ISBN: 9783406791062

Main content page count: 384 Pages

ISBN: 9783406791062