This is the tale of a British man who, after his estranged father died, walked from Germany to Romania (1500 miles) to try and find out more about his Jewish Romanian father. The walk takes place during the Clinton administration and the Bosnian War.
Most of the hike through Germany is along lake shores. He is surprised that there is nothing to mark the border between East and West Germany. The people in East Germany are angry about the collapse of Communism, for, although they were poor, they had food. Now everyone was out for himself and willing to steal from others.
His usual practice upon entering a town was to select a promising-looking person and stay with them. This person would connect him to others who could be of better assistance. Some of the most unlikely people were the most helpful.
Ted's goal was to go to his father's hometown of Brailla, Romania and see if anything from his fathers' years there still existed. Also, find out how he had gotten from there to being a London businessman wearing a suit, derby hat and umbrella. And how did he know so many languages?
The difficulties he encountered were lack of knowledge of the language, lack of dictionaries, and lack of records. The Ukranians, Romanians, Germans and Poles all hated the Jews and were glad they were gone. Their only regret was that the "Jews made it work" - meaning the towns were clean and looked nice, the buildings were beautiful when the Jews were there. Often the old buildings were razed when the Jews were expelled, and ugly concrete apartment blocks went up in their place. Since the Jews were gone, they now blamed their problems on the still-thriving Gypsies.
Read it, you'll like it.