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Bezig met laden... Irgendwann werden wir uns alles erzählen (2011)door Daniela Krien
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. En el verano de 1990, los jóvenes habitantes de la Alemania socialista ven cómo el país donde nacieron se desvanece ante sus ojos. Cerca de una frontera que ha dejado de serlo, en una granja rodeada de bosques y ondulantes praderas, Maria vive en casa de la familia de Johannes, su novio. Los padres de éste la acogen como a una hija, aunque pronto queda claro que no está hecha para la dura vida del campo. A punto de cumplir los diecisiete años, delicada y soñadora, Maria ya ha visto suficiente dolor en su propia familia y prefiere retirarse en los maizales o junto al arroyo que bordea los prados para abstraerse sumergiéndose en las páginas de Dostoievski o Knut Hamsun. Así, su vida transcurre apaciblemente hasta que conoce a Henner, un hombre de cuarenta años, solitario y enigmático, de trato arisco pero con un extraño poder de seducción. Una mirada, un simple roce, despiertan en ambos un deseo irrefrenable, una pasión casi atávica, cuya intensidad los arrastra a una situación insostenible en una pequeña comunidad rural marcada por décadas de intimidación y desconfianza. So recht weiß ich nicht, was ich zu diesem Buch sagen soll. Das Ende der DDR gibt den Rahmen für diese Geschichte. Ein 16-jähriges Mädchen zieht zu ihrem Freund auf den Hof seiner Eltern, erlebt dort eher unbeteiligt das Ende das Alten und den unwägbaren Neubeginn. Gleichzeitig verfällt sie nahezu dem 40-jährigen Nachbarn Henner. Das Buch ist sehr gut zu lesen, es transportiert die Atmosphäre, aber Maria und ihre „Liebe“ fand ich trotzdem befremdlich. SOMEDAY WE’LL TELL EACH OTHER EVERYTHING is set against the backdrop of the fall of the Berlin Wall. This historic cataclysmic event and the flux it causes in the lives of Germans from both sides reflects Maria’s inner turmoil. One night her boyfriend Johannes takes her to live at his family’s farm. Maria is a dreamer and unaccustomed to the hard physical work and long hours required. She stops going to school, prefers to sleep late and read. She and Johannes share the attic bedroom. The spider’s nest as Maria calls it for the spiders that descend nightly on their silken threads. Her mother and grandparents don’t appear to have a say or a problem with her living at the Brendles’ farm, nor do his parents, Marianne and Sigfried. It’s at the farm store that Maria meets Henner who lives on the adjoining farm. Henner is forty to Maria’s sixteen. Despite their age difference and the darkness in Henner they begin an affair. Maria is torn by guilt for deceiving Johannes and his family but feels helpless against the hunger she feels for Henner. Maria and Henner’s intense affair played out against changes and accompanying fear and adjustments, gives it a disturbing and tragic air. The past lives of the characters give a chilling insight into life in East Germany. One example was Maria being honored in being chosen to attend the Wilhelm Pieck Pioneer Camp for six weeks during the school year. You didn’t turn this down. Maria’s mother had to ship her the proper items. There was no end to the rules and regulations: how you were supposed to arrange your clothes over the chair every evening when you undressed, the neckerchief always on top; how to make your bed with military precision’ when you had to get up for early morning exercises, barked at by loudspeakers, which were in every block and throughout the camp grounds. That was my turning point, something snapped inside me, my resistance dissolved. I felt at one with the others, strong and invincible. It was an uplifting moment, indescribable, and at the same time one of the most unsettling aspects of my entire stay. When, after six weeks, I came home and sang Russian war songs at the dinner table, my mother, in tears, asked me, “What on earth have they done to you?” I cried and missed my friends. It took me a while to get used to being at home again, and my yearning for camplife eventually turned into a rejection of everything collective. SOMEDAY WE’LL TELL EACH OTHER EVERYTHING is a fascinating glimpse into life on the other side before and after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The characters are realistic. The way they were shaped by their circumstances and environment, not knowing who you could trust when your own spouse could be working with the Stasi. What a way to live. The changes in them, their communities, and livelihoods, all these made for interesting reading. It may be a cultural difference but the lack of parental say and control in Maria living at the farm with Johannes was troubling. This and other events make Maria seem mature beyond her sixteen years yet I hesitate to call SOMEDAY WE’LL TELL EACH OTHER EVERYTHING a love story, despite its billing as that. An affair with such a pronounced age gap is unsettling and despite her seeming maturity feels wrong, a train wreck in the making, but compelling. All in all Maria’s story is addicting. Reviewed for Miss Ivy's Book Nook geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de uitgeversreeks(en)List Taschenbuch (61131) Prijzen
It is summer 1990, only months after the border dividing Germany has dissolved. Maria, nearly seventeen, moves in with her boyfriend on his family farm. A chance encounter with enigmatic loner Henner, a neighboring farmer, quickly develops into a passionate relationship. But Maria soon finds that Henner can be as brutal as he is tender--his love reveals itself through both animal violence and unexpected sensitivity. Maria builds a fantasy of their future life together, but her expectations differ dramatically from those of Henner himself, until it seems their story can only end in tragedy. Someday We'll Tell Each Other Everything is a bold and impressive debut in which love and violence, conflict and longing are inextricably entwined. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)833.92Literature German literature and literatures of related languages German fiction Modern period (1900-) 1990-LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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