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Paperback Book Details
  • 09/2021
  • 9780578841199 B09JLBZCVC
  • 520 pages
  • $21.95
Paul Marzell
Author, Illustrator
Heimat
Paul Marzell, author

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

Matthias Schmidt left post-WWI Germany in 1929 for America intending to return someday to Neisse, his Heimat, as a successful American citizen. Before leaving Germany, his plan began unraveling in Berlin’s Bahnhof where he saved the life of an American diplomat. His heroism created a friendship with the diplomat and three other German emigrants, with similar dreams, that sustained them through misconceptions of the American dream, the Great Depression, assimilation into American culture, and WW II. However, the war severed contact with Matthias’s family and sent him and his friends on separate paths. To a shipyard building the means to carry destruction to Germany and their Heimat. Into the US Army to fight the Japanese in the Pacific after surviving the attack on Pearl Harbor. Conscription into Germany’s Wehrmacht to invade France, Russia, and fight against Americans in the Battle of the Bulge. And to the Nuremberg trials to bring Nazi war criminals to justice.
Reviews
“No one expected our country would decay into what it is today,” a German woman writes, in 1946, to her one-time romantic prospect, Matthias, in the prologue of the historical epic of outsize ambition. A baker without local prospects, Matthias left his homeland—his Heimat—to start a new life in America in 1929, planning one day to return as a man of means. An historical epic of outsize ambition, Marzell’s immigrant saga tracks the journey of Matthias—and other Germans—from the security of home to squalid boarding houses amid the “swarming masses of people and vehicles” in New York City and Philadelphia. As Matthias learns English and adapts to a new land, he relishes any connection to home, though those grow more fraught and tenuous as the U.S. falls into Depression and fascism is on the rise in Germany.

With inviting historic and cultural detail, and a keen sense of feeling caught between nations, Marzell dramatizes the daily lives and drifts of mind of his cast, the fiction attentive at all times to the question of what life for people like Matthias or Josef, his friend, would have felt like. “America is complicated,” Josef says early on, before Hitler’s invasion of Poland changes everything. They yearn for the Heimat, for family and friends, “the food, the smells” and lifting the beer stein.

The 20th century, of course, will disrupt these lives further, with the lives of Matthias, Josef, their friend Feliks, and endless millions of others scattered by the winds of war. Marzell’s depiction ranges from Pearl Harbor to Nuremberg, plus much discussion of everything before and after (“The civilized world would not tolerate that,” one character insists, during a discussion of Hitler’s dark plans.) Much of the story and world are revealed through dialogue as Marzell’s people, like any of us, try to make sense of a world that won’t slow down.

Takeaway: A humane, vividly realized epic of German immigrants to the U.S. between the world wars

Great for fans of: Lourise Erdrich’s The Master Butchers Singing Club, Mary Relindes Ellis’s The Bohemian Flats.

Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 09/2021
  • 9780578841199 B09JLBZCVC
  • 520 pages
  • $21.95
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