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Bezig met laden... Bloedbroeders (origineel 1932; editie 2014)door Ernst Haffner, Anne Folkertsma (Vertaler)
Informatie over het werkBloedbroeders door Ernst Haffner (1932)
Books Read in 2023 (4,217) Bezig met laden...
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. Blood Brothers by Ernst Haffner is a novel that takes place during the interwar era in German. Haffner was a social worker and this was his only book. Published in 1932, it was banned by the Nazi's one month later. There is no record of Haffner after the war. Haffner's book details the lives of street gangs and the kids who make them up. The Versailles Treaty was tough on Germany and it was the average citizen who suffered the most. Gangs of kids from young teens to young adults group together in tight knit clubs. The clubs like street gangs today have a code of honor and a chain of command. There is a military like discipline among the members and a life of petty crime. Some fit into the lifestyle and others are leery of the criminal life. For some, it is their only choice if they want to survive on the streets. Blood Brothers took me back to the first time I read The Outsiders back in my preteen years. It is rough, gritty, and goes deeper than the The Outsiders. Life on the street is rough whether you depend on crime or a more honest means to survive. Blood Brothers shows the reader that it's not only the NYC underground where gritty lifelike street stories are born. A well written and excellent work of historical fiction. The gang subculture of homeless youth in Weimar-era Berlin, rendered in lean, muscular prose well-suited to the subject. The main narrative follows the converging paths of Willi and Ludwig, two adolescent escapees from the juvenile detention system who find protection and a sense of belonging within a gang of pickpockets on some seriously mean streets. As the scale of criminal activity ramps up, the stakes get progressively larger; sensing impending disaster and having no desire to become professional criminals, our heroes hit on a scheme to break free and - they hope - establish a basis for survival within society rather than on its underbelly. I was surprised by how invested I became in the fate of these characters. The novel does a good job of conveying the bonds of loyalty and subtle personality dynamics that form among this makeshift street family, eking out a tenuous niche among thieves, hustlers, snitches, prostitutes, beggars, rival gangs, and the police. Haffner's journalistic eye evokes the harshness of Berlin's "gray, proletarian streets", the crowded, smoke-filled claustrophobia of its basement dives, the institutional bleakness of the correctional facilities designed to warehouse kids until they reach the age of majority (until then, they are basically non-persons, unable to work legally and always subject to arrest). Haffner has an open heart that never shortchanges the dignity of these characters. There are lots of small, well-observed moments in which they get to be simply human, such as when Ludwig, recently fled from detention, hungrily takes in the tumult of a bustling Alexanderplatz after months of sensory-deprived incarceration. Moments like this throw into relief the more adrenaline depictions of life lived in extremis: unable to afford a ticket, Willi spends a harrowing night clinging to the underside of a passenger train speeding toward Berlin. Haffner gives us the racket, the wind-chill, the muscle cramps, the sheer terror, the rocks and pebbles thrown up from the tracks hitting him in the face. Hang on for dear life and let your guard down only at the risk of being ground up: it's an apt metaphor for how his characters subsist from day to day. Haffner was a social worker in Berlin at the time the novel takes place, and the self-perpetuating, structural brokenness of the various bureaucracies whose wheels his characters are caught in (or trying to avoid) always looms large. The Nazis didn't care for Blood Brothers and banned it when they came to power. Haffner himself ultimately disappeared in the chaos of the war years. Blood Brothers is his only known work. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Erelijsten
Blood Brothers is the only known novel by German social worker and journalist Ernst Haffner, of whom nearly all traces were lost during the course of World War II. Told in stark, unsparing detail, Haffner's story delves into the illicit underworld of Berlin on the eve of Hitler's rise to power, describing how these blood brothers move from one petty crime to the next, spending their nights in underground bars and makeshift hostels, struggling together to survive the harsh realities of gang life, and finding in one another the legitimacy denied them by society. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)833.912Literature German literature and literatures of related languages German fiction Modern period (1900-) 1900-1990 1900-1945LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Whether the translation was accurate I can't say, but this English version has very good flow and makes the material perhaps too easily borne. ( )