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Summary
Summary
A wealthy family tries--and fails--to seal themselves off from the chaos of post-World War II life surrounding them in this stunning novel by one of Germany's most important post-war writers.
In East Prussia, January 1945, the German forces are in retreat and the Red Army is approaching. The von Globig family's manor house, the Georgenhof, is falling into disrepair. Auntie runs the estate as best she can since Eberhard von Globig, a special officer in the German army, went to war, leaving behind his beautiful but vague wife, Katharina, and her bookish twelve-year-old son, Peter. As the road fills with Germans fleeing the occupied territories, the Georgenhof begins to receive strange visitors--a Nazi violinist, a dissident painter, a Baltic baron, even a Jewish refugee. Yet in the main, life continues as banal, wondrous, and complicit as ever for the family, until their caution, their hedged bets, and their denial are answered by the wholly expected events they haven't allowed themselves to imagine.
All for Nothing , published in 2006, was the last novel by Walter Kempowski, one of postwar Germany's most acclaimed and popular writers.
Author Notes
Walter Kempowski (1929-2007) was born in Hamburg. During World War II, he was made to serve in a penalty unit of the Hitler Youth due to his association with the rebellious Swingjugend movement of jazz lovers, and he did not finish high school. After the war he settled in West Germany. On a 1948 visit to Rostock, his hometown, in East Germany, Walter, his brother Robert and their mother were arrested for espiona≥ a Soviet military tribunal sentenced him to twenty-five years in prison, of which he served eight at the notorious "Yellow Misery" prison in Bautzen. In 1957 he graduated high school. His first success as an author was the autobiographical novel Tadellöser & Wolff (1971), part of his acclaimed German Chronicle series of novels. In the 1980s he began work on an immense project, Echo Soundings , gathering firsthand accounts, diaries, letters, and memoirs of World War II, which he collated and curated into ten volumes published over twenty years, and which is considered a modern classic.
Anthea Bell is the recipient of the 2009 Schlegel-Tieck Prize for her translation of Stefan Zweig's Burning Secret . In 2002 she won the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize and the Helen and Kurt Wolff Prize for her translation of W.G. Sebald's Austerlitz . Her translations of Zweig's novellas Confusion and Journey into the Past are available as NYRB Classics.
Jenny Erpenbeck was born in East Berlin in 1967. She is the author of several works of fiction, including The End of Days , which won the Hans Fallada Prize and the International Foreign Fiction Prize, and most recently, Go, Went, Gone . Erpenbeck lives in Berlin.
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Kempowski's atmospheric novel opens on the decaying Georgenhof estate, which lies on the East Prussian border, in 1945, as the Red Army approaches. The vestiges of a family whose paterfamilias and uniting figure is serving in Italy bide their time and try to go about life in the mansion, where Hitler's likeness still adorns paintings, stamps, and banknotes, not fully aware of the danger of the approaching Red Army. At the story's center is young Peter, sincere and bookish, who studies his microscope in a bedroom adjacent to that of his dead sister, Elfie, and is taught by the foppish schoolmaster Dr. Wagner. Peter's father, Eberhard von Globig, has gone to the Italian Front; Peter's mother, the "languorous beauty" Katharina, perhaps already a widow, waits in vain for news of Eberhard's fate. "Auntie, a sinewy old spinster," keeps a lookout for the influx of refugees that-originally confined to the surrounding buildings-soon mobs the courtyard. A change is coming to their way of life, heralded by a series of guests-a disabled "political economist," an unreconstructed Nazi violinist, a painter, a debauched Baltic baron, and, fatefully, a Jewish fugitive. Gothic and haunting, the novel asks what things will be like "if things turn out bad," knowing the answer will come too soon. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Guardian Review
In his final novel, the German author bears witness to the collective experience of war with compassion and grace This novel by the German writer Walter Kempowski, who died in 2007, is influenced by his mighty collection of diaries, letters and memoirs, Das Echolot (Echo Soundings), a 10-volume collage of the collective German experience throughout the second world war. He began work on the project after finding some old photographs and letters lying in the street, and deciding to "bend down and pick up" the testimonies of all, from concentration camp prisoners to the Reich's high command -- leaving nothing out, simply presenting. All for Nothing, his last novel, translated by Anthea Bell, resounds with that same love for the pathos of detail, the same determination to bear witness to the entire human experience. The book's characters may see each other as Jew, Nazi, peasant, aristocrat, Pole, foreigner, but the writer steadfastly refuses to see any of them as less than fully human. It follows the fortunes of a family in East Prussia, between January and May 1945. The once rich Von Globigs live in run-down grandeur on the Georgenhof estate, an old shambles of a place not far from the eastern front, bracing itself against the bitterness of a terrible winter. The Georgenhof sits, along with a modern housing estate, in the middle of miles of snow, its gate askew, the summer drawing room ice-cold and full of dumped packing crates. Dead flies lie on their backs in the teacups on the dresser. Twelve-year--old Peter, a quiet boy, hangs around playing with his microscope, trying to get out of his Hitler Youth duties and avoiding Drygalski, the petty official who oversees the estate across the road. Drygalski, mourning a dead son and caring for a sick wife, is a puffed-up bureaucrat obsessed with his own importance. He keeps a constant suspicious eye on the Georgenhof's Polish handyman and two Ukrainian maids. There are a dog and a cat, a few chickens, and, on the edge of the wood, the small grave of Peter's little sister Elfie, who died two years before. Peter's father Eberhard has a desk job in Italy far from the front, and his mother, Katharina, is a placid beauty, vague and naive, withdrawn to the point of vacancy. The real brains of the household is Auntie, "a sinewy old spinster with a wart on her chin". Various travellers arrive: a political economist, a young violinist, a touring artist recording buildings and bridges for posterity. Each brings news: a blown-up bridge, distant cannon-fire. Rumours abound, but the wireless says everything is under control and the trains still run, supplying the Reich with the products of Ukraine and Byelorussia, where even the topsoil has been stripped and sent west. The novel builds gradually, dreamily at times, with simple prose and lots of short sections, a quiet undercurrent of growing unease getting steadily stronger, always ignored, put aside till tomorrow. After all, how does one leave a life? No one can quite make the radical decision to go, even as the trickle of refugees from the east becomes a stream, passing stolidly between the Georgenhof and the houses opposite, bearing with them the loss of what they have left behind and the few small, saved details of their lives. Kempowski uses detail like a repeating phrase in music, and there is a musical quality also in the movement of the book as a whole, from its quiet beginning through the relentless build to its massively impressive climax. The repetition is skilfully fed into the narrative to create a gradual deepening of tone. People are revealed slowly by the things they cling to. The trivial becomes profound as objects take on huge emotional significance: a Persian lamb cap, a meerschaum pipe, a stamp album. Memories are also possessions, of course, and the mundane ones, endlessly recurring, are equally poignant. Inevitably, the Von Globigs' reality is overtaken by war. The change has the suddenness of nightmare, and is made all the more powerful by the fact that the style remains precise, a simple recounting of facts, the worst and the best of it. "People's intentions are never unequivocal," Kempowski once said, and his observations of human foibles, fears and weaknesses are honest and humane. All for Nothing is a beautiful, forgiving and compassionate book that looks beyond the futile divisions people make between themselves. It reaches its last devastating line with poetic sensibility and the grace of a classical tragedy, confirming Kempowski as a truly great writer. * Carol Birch's Jamrach's Menagerie is published by Canongate. To order All for Nothing for [pound]11.99 (RRP [pound]14.99) go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over [pound]10, online orders only. - Carol Birch.
Kirkus Review
The late German author serves up a bleak tale of the final days of World War II as a down-on-its-luck family prepares for worse to come.Eberhard von Globig is a Sonderfhrer stationed in Italy, his job to ransack the country of its best foods and wines, while his wife, Katherina, "famous as a languorous beauty, black-haired and blue-eyed," is left to run his rattletrap East Prussian estate. As Kempowski (Swansong 1945: A Collective Diary of the Last Days of the Third Reich, 2015, etc.) quickly makes clear, though, the person who is really in charge is called "Auntie," "a sinewy old spinster with a wart on her chin" whose resourcefulness is not to be underestimated. At the center of the story, with all its roman clef elements, is 12-year-old Peter, who would rather be doing anything than mandatory service in the Hitler Youth. Keeping a disapproving eye on him is Drygalski, the manager of a nearby estate, who, though mourning a dead son and tending to a sick wife, has plenty of time to spy on the von Globigs and their suspiciously multiethnic household, with its Polish handyman and Ukrainian maids. Into this odd scene, as Russian guns rumble on the horizon, comes a steady flow of refugees and dispossessed people: a mixed family whose sons, half Jewish, "had been dreadfully sad because they couldn't join the Hitler Youth," a political economist, an artist, a musician, and others. For a time it seems as if the war might bypass this odd congeries of people, as if somehow taking pity, but in time events catch up to them in the form of bullets, bombs, and columns of ghostlike people bound for the camps a step ahead of the advancing Red Armyabout whom a schoolmaster remarks to Peter, hopefully, "The Russians had been here in the First War, too, and had behaved decently."Memorable and monumental: a book to read alongside rival and compatriot Gnter Grass' Tin Drum as a portrait of decline and fall. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
New York Review of Books Review
IN THE FIRST frigid months of 1945, nearly 750,000 Germans fled East Prussia ahead of the advancing Red Army. Lines of horsedrawn carts laden with women, children and painstakingly trussed-up possessions snaked along roads that were often clogged with tanks heading in the opposite direction. Three hundred thousand civilians died of cold or in Allied bombardments or drowned in overloaded boats trying to cross the Baltic Sea. With its harrowing stories and epic sweep, this exodus would seem a rich mine for novelists. Yet for half a century it lay untapped. During that time, the subject of the German civilian victims of World War II and the millions of internal refugees created by flight and expulsion was monopolized by the right-wing fringe of West German politics, stoking dreams of reclaimed territories and propping up false equivalences with the immense suffering wrought on others by Hitler's war. In East Germany, the topic was simply taboo. When Walter Kempowski's "All for Nothing" appeared in German in 2006, it was part of a first wave of public engagement with a long-simmering trauma. This novel, now published in a crystalline translation by Anthea Bell, examines with melancholic detachment the members of a still-privileged household in a small East Prussian town as they wrestle with a crucial decision: whether to stay or go. When they do join the swelling convoys that pass by their windows, they are sucked into the chaotic death spasms of the war. Kempowski, who endowed his characters with autobiographical traits, died in 2007 at the age of 78. Five years earlier, Günter Grass had published "Crabwalk," a fictionalized account of the 1945 sinking of a ship bearing thousands of East Prussian refugees. In 2007, "The March of Millions," a lavish television production, sparked debate over the culture of remembrance, as well as protests from Polish politicians irritated by the portrayal of wartime Germans as victims. As the stories kept coming, their significance changed. In 2015, as hundreds of thousands of mostly Syrian refugees spilled into Germany, the country's runaway literary hit was Dörte Hansen's "This House Is Mine," a weightlessly lyrical novel about the legacy of the East German trauma. Across the media, commentators now held up the historical German exodus not as a right-wing grudge but as a rallying flag for liberal empathy with contemporary migrants and refugees. But "All for Nothing" isn't easily appropriated by any ideology. Kempowski's sympathy for the suffering of his characters and his acknowledgment of the attendant destruction of their civilization are diffused by a fine-grained ambivalence. AT THE HEART of the story, which is set in January 1945, is a family of once-landed gentry that in the interwar years traded most of its estate for stocks in English and Romanian industries. Despite the clan's attendant losses, the exasperatingly vague Katharina von Globig, "famous as a languorous beauty," is still able to spend her days lounging behind closed doors. Her husband, Eberhard, has been granted a cushy position as an officer in Italy, far from the front and close to small luxuries. In a hidden nook of the Georgenhof, the family manor, bottles of Barolo lie waiting to be uncorked "when the war is over." The house is run by an energetic "Auntie" and three foreign workers, from Poland and the Ukraine, who listen expectantly to the low rumbling of no-longer-distant artillery. A pallid son, Peter, spends his days trying to find something interesting to look at through the microscope he received as a Christmas present. His education is entrusted to an aging village schoolmaster, Dr. Wagner, who gladly makes the daily eight-kilometer round-trip journey on foot through the bitter cold for the prospect of fried bread and crackling and, perhaps, other, more private satisfactions. Visitors come to the house: a female violinist who plays for injured soldiers in field hospitals; a philatelic economist; a painter charged with sketching what remains of the local landmarks. The talk of war and invasion proceeds in platitudes and snippets of propaganda; here and there, German atrocities perpetuated farther east are spoken of in hushed tones. The local Nazi Party leader, who has orders to stave off any attempt at flight to the West, is not invited inside but takes frequent shortcuts through the Georgenhof grounds, leaving a trail in the pure snow. Caught between denial and fear, the residents appear suspended in time. It's boredom, not pity, that drives Katharina to shelter a Jewish fugitive for a night, a decision that will finally, catastrophically, set the family's exodus in motion. Kempowski's prose contains collages of confetti-size fragments from literature, biblical texts, church chorales, 1940 s movies and popular songs. It's a technique he employed to illuminating effect in his nearly 8,000-page "Echolot," a nonfiction work made up of collected texts offering myriad perspectives on key weeks of the war. The idea for this technique came to Kempowski one winter evening in 1950 when he was a prisoner in the German Democratic Republic, accused of spying for the Americans. Crossing the courtyard of the prison, he heard a humming sound. "Those are your comrades in their cells," a guard escorting him said, "talking among themselves." Kempowski later described the hum as a "Babylonian chorus." In "All for Nothing," that chorus is shrunk to a chamber motet that is finely blended yet only bitterly poignant, making the novel's bloodied and epic finale feel insufficiently supported. The assembly of found texts is apt for establishing the period setting and marking the disintegration of German culture, not for the creation of characters with much depth. Still, as a literary response to a long-buried collective trauma, "All for Nothing" is well worth reading, especially now that the country's parliament contains delegates from the far-right Alternative for Germany party with deep ties to groups who were expelled from East Prussia. CORINNA DA FONSECA-WOLLHEIM IS a contributing classical music criticfor The Times.
Library Journal Review
Published in 2006, this final work by major postwar German author Kempowski (Swansong 1945) takes place in East Prussia during the winter of 1944-45, as refugees flee west before the relentlessly advancing Soviet Army. Interestingly, it's not the refugees but the once distinguished, now nearly destitute von Globigs who form the novel's core. With Eberhard von Globig at a reasonably cushy job behind the lines, the tumbling-down manor house is occupied by his beautiful but vacuous wife, Katharina; their serious young son Peter, coming of age at exactly the wrong time; and Auntie, who single-mindedly runs the estate. People drop in, from a Nazi violinist and Peter's fey tutor to a stuffy Baltic baron foisted on the family and a Jewish refugee Katharina helps less from conviction than passivity. But what astonishes throughout is the clearly delivered sense of how the von Globigs cling to the past and refuse to face what's coming. Who will survive and, as the title suggests, what's the point? VERDICT Penetrating work for readers of literary and upmarket historical fiction. © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.