In this honest and deeply moving book, we share the emotions, the hopes and fears, of a doctor’s family in Germany during the last days of World War II and the beginning of the American occupation. Through Karin Lorenz, the doctor’s nearly seventeen-year-old daughter, the family is invited to stay with a young and dedicated minister, Pastor Helmut Lobelius, in a village away from the direct path of the oncoming U.S. Army and the Allied bombers. The end of the war is obviously only a matter of time; Dr. Lorenz wants his wife and daughter and young son Till to be as far removed from danger as possible. So Karin’s dearest wish comes true. Now, daily, she will see Helmut, with whom- despite a great difference in age and background - she has fallen deeply in love. There in the medieval village of Eberstein, this many-faceted story unfolds. It is a story of radiant young love and of bittersweet sacrifice made all the more poignant by the surrounding tragedy and brutality.
German-born children’s author known for her "depictions of humane, realistic characters."
Benary-Isbert attended the College St. Carolus and the University of Frankfurt. She worked as a secretary at the Museum of Ethnology and Anthropology in Frankfurt, Germany from 1910-1917, when she married Wilhelm Benary. They settled in Erfurt, in East Germany.
When the Russians took over Germany, she fled to the apartment of a friend in West Germany. In 1948 she wrote Die Arche Noah (The Ark). In 1953 it received a first prize at the New York Herald Tribune's Spring Book Festival. Post-war Germany became a common theme in most of her works.
In 1952 she moved to the United States, where she was naturalized in 1957 and worked as a writer until her death. She received the Jane Addams Children's Book Award from the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in 1957 for "Annegret und Cara".
Most of Benary-Isbert's books were originally written and published in German; some were later translated into English and published again.
This book really opened my eyes about WWII Germany. There were lots of names and places that were a little difficult for me to keep track of (as they were mostly unfamiliar to me), but it didn't make the story too hard to follow. It was fascinating to read about civilians from a variety of political backgrounds coming to a realization of what the war really meant to each of them on a personal level.
Benary-Isbert's talent for describing nature and the simple details of a home-spun life make a striking contrast to the horrors surrounding the concentration camps and prisoners-of-war. However, those horrors - while not glossed over - are not related in a disturbing or graphic way. Instead, the perspective is one of deep humility and hope for survival and homecoming.
It is really a fantastic book. I only gave it four stars instead of five because it was a little too deep and melancholy for me to want to read it over and over again.
I always enjoy Margot Benary-Isbert and her depictions of the sufferings of ordinary Germans who never liked Hitler (and you believe them). This one is about a young girl and an older pastor in the countryside who are drawn to each other but fear they are not meant to be life partners despite their mutual admiration and attraction. Their story unfolds against the last few months before Germany officially loses the war, when the girl, her mother, brother, and all of their livestock take in the rural parsonage from the threat of bombs in the cities. I didn't love it as much as the others (especially her Ark series) but I did enjoy it.