Barbara
Stark-Nemon has written an unusual novel, and what makes it even more
surprising is that, while the author has invented dialogue and imagined the
scenes described, the main character’s life follows very closely the story of
an actual person, Stark-Nemon’s great-aunt.
Kläre
is eighteen years old when we first meet her in the opening chapter of Even
in Darkness.
The year is 1913. On vacation with her family, she is contemplating a marriage
proposal from a serious young lawyer, and by the end of the chapter, on the eve
of the First World War and in the face of her brother’s enlistment in the army,
she has decided to put away girlish fantasies and marry the formal and
unromantic Jakob Kohler. He will be a good husband.
The
years follow inexorably: 1923, 1928, 1932, and life in Germany grows more and
more difficult, but Kläre and Jakob have two sons, the boys have a large and
loving extended family, as well, and Kläre’s life flows with relative calm. She
is happy to take up again an old friendship with Amalie, whose fiancé was
killed in World War I and who has now married a widower with five children. The younger son, Ansel, does not live with his father and stepfather but in a
Catholic orphanage; however, he does meet Kläre on a visit home to his family.
In
1933 a written directive comes to Bernhardt Steinmann in his publishing house:
“On April 1, 1933, all Party members and associated agencies or services will
boycott Jewish stores, doctors, and lawyers.” Steinmann’s first concern is for
the Jewish authors whose work Berendt Verlag is committed to publishing, but he
and his mother also have more personal concerns, and his first chance encounter
with Kläre Kohler soon takes on deeper meaning for them both.
As
the situation in Germany steadily worsens, Kläre’s older son, Erwin, is able to
go to England where he eventually joins the British army; the younger, smuggled
out of Germany, arrives in Palestine (not yet Israel), changes his name from
Werner to Avraham, and gladly takes on the task of helping to build a new
nation. Meanwhile, back home, Kläre and Jakob are seized and taken for
“relocation at Theresienstadt, where Kläre and
her mother were both relieved and dismayed to be reunited after the mother’s
earlier seizure -- relief at finding each other alive, dismay at knowing
neither would be spared the sufferings and dangers of the concentration camp.
It
was Kläre’s training in massage that had introduced her to Bernhardt
Steinmann’s household. In Theresienstadt the same
skill ensures her family’s survival when the camp commandant calls on her to be
a maid in his living quarters: because she holds a certificate of massage
training and the commandant suffers from headache and neck pain, Kläre
is able to bring back to her mother and husband a few extra morsels of food.
They survive.
Not the end of the story.
What
I have told you is only the sketchiest outline of what takes place in the
Kohler family prior to and during World War II, but it is the character of
Kläre – based, remember, on a very real person – and the author’s skill in
conveying the depth of her personality that makes this story as deeply moving
as it is. Kläre’s decision to remain in Germany following the war and the life
she makes for herself following the death of her husband are unexpected and
almost incredible. So successful is the fictional recreation, however, that the
fantastic seems somehow inevitable.
“I
didn’t want this book to end!” said the customer-friend who addressed me, the
day after she finished reading it, as “Goddess of Books.” The accolade was an
exaggeration, but when I had the privilege of reading this novel in manuscript,
I didn’t want it to end, either. Additionally, I was impatient to share it with
customers and friends in my bookstore, so the April 2015 release made me very
happy indeed.
2014: Barbara at far right, me next to her, dog stealing scene |
And now a greater happiness is in store, because Barbara
Stark-Nemon will be at Dog Ears Books next Wednesday, August 5, at 7 p.m. to read from her book
and have what I know will be a wonderful conversation with the bookstore
audience that evening. I urge everyone who can possibly make the event to join
us! It will be a memorable evening.
3 comments:
Sounds very interesting! Have a great event!
Wow, some storyline! Sounds like a great read...
Okay, the postscript today, April 8, 2016, is that this book was awarded the Gold Medal for European fiction by the Independent Publisher Book Awards. Well deserved, Barbara! And yes, it is a compelling story, to say the least.
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