Effingers

Gabriele Tergit

Book - 2025

"Three generations of German Jewish family undergo the tumult, upheaval, and brutality of nineteenth- and twentieth-century history in this panoramic and skillfully nuanced family drama, rich with gossip and incident, capturing a Germany now lost to time. Gabriele Tergit's Effingers is a novel both epic and intimate as it chronicles the lives and fates of three generations of a German Jewish family. Beginning from 1878-the year after the narrative of Buddenbrooks ends-and ending in 1948, we follow the Effingers, a family of modest craftsmen from southern Germany, who are joined through marriage to two families of high-society financiers in Berlin, the Goldschmidts and the Oppners. The Effingers soon rise to prominence as one of th...e most important German industrialist families in Berlin, but with the outbreak of World War I, they fall on hard times, and must then navigate the tumultuous changes of the Weimar Republic. Full of parties and drama and the most delicious gossip, and featuring a kaleidoscopic cast of unforgettable characters, Effingers is a vibrant and keenly observed account of German Jewish life in all its richness and complexity. Tergit's journalistic precision and limpid prose dazzle in Sophie Duvernoy's elegant, fluid translation. Criminally underrated when it first came out in 1951, and only in recent years undergoing rediscovery, Effingers is a searching meditation on identity and nationality that establishes Tergit as one of the most significant writers of the twentieth century"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York, NY : The New York Review of Books 2025.
Language
English
German
Main Author
Gabriele Tergit (author)
Other Authors
Sophie Duvernoy (translator)
Physical Description
853 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781681379791
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Sprawling, multigenerational novel of Jewish life in Germany. Tergit's novel, hitherto unavailable in English, is in part a roman à clef, narrated in unadorned, matter-of-fact prose. The Effinger family is a blend of urban and rural, secular and religious, socialist and capitalist, its paterfamilias a watchmaker in a small German town, his children striving to find their places in the world as the 20th century nears. Benno, the oldest, works in a clothing factory; Karl is a bank apprentice in Berlin; Paul is a laborer who dreams of becoming an industrialist. Only Willy, the youngest son, has any interest in his father's trade, while the older daughter, Helene, is engaged to be married. All find themselves in a Germany that is soon to be unrecognizable in changing times, with Benno taunting Paul, "You want German Romanticism, lilacs and half-timbered houses and strolls outside the city gates, and yet you want gas engines too." Those gas engines will come along in the form of tanks on the frontlines of World War I, but well before then, the family is constantly reminded of its outsider status. Indeed, the world grows much darker for the Effingers and their kin: Paul, who has fulfilled his dream by founding a factory that builds the first "people's car," only to have it torn away from him by the rising Nazi regime, while Erwin, one of Karl's sons and a war hero, proclaims, "We must stop lying to ourselves and admit that we love a Germany that no longer exists…the Germans of today are strangers to us." He's right, as Paul laments, "I believed in the good in people--that was the gravest error of my misguided life." Pensive and full of foreshadowing, Tergit's novel nonetheless suggests that things might have been otherwise, about which translator Duvernoy, in her helpful commentary, notes that the book, published in 1951, predated Germany's full "postwar reckoning with the Holocaust." A masterwork of modern German literature. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.