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WE GERMANS by Alexander Starritt

WE GERMANS

by Alexander Starritt

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-31642-980-1
Publisher: Little, Brown

An elderly German tells his grandson about his World War II experiences on the Eastern Front in this flawed but thoughtful work.

Hitler’s disastrous invasion of the Soviet Union led to the deaths of millions of soldiers and civilians. Starritt views the war through the eyes of elderly survivor Meissner, a German artillery soldier. His memories of those days, his thoughts about guilt and shame, have been reawakened by questions from his grandson, Callum, who grew up in Scotland but feels “an odd sensation of connectedness” to Germany and a shame that “has gathered, like a mulchy spot on an apple.” In a long letter to Callum occasionally interrupted by the younger man’s comments, Meissner says he wants to explain something about his war. “I can’t quite articulate it myself,” he says, but “it’s to do with courage.” In autumn 1944, after fighting and retreating in Russia and Ukraine, he's in Poland, near the German border. Meissner and four others get separated from their unit after being ordered to go looking for a rumored food depot. They see Polish villagers hung by unidentified men from a single tree “in bunches, like swollen plums.” They kill German soldiers guarding the food depot (the rumors were true) who refuse to share. When they later see other German troops rape and crucify women, Meissner wonders if it's in retaliation for his group's action against the food depot. They steal a tank and use it against the Russians. These episodes are well drawn; the brief time inside the tank is a small masterpiece. But it’s not entirely clear where courage comes in as Meissner’s theme despite a few brave actions. Elsewhere he struggles to define his views on the Holocaust. He stresses that he didn’t see the camps and doesn’t feel any collective guilt. “What I do feel, ineradicably, is shame.” That at least is clear, the legacy of shame. It hasn’t diminished for an old man many years after the war’s end, and it remains inescapable for his grandson born in the 1980s in a different country. Starritt himself shows courage in his approach to one facet of the war’s legacy and may offer solace to Germans like Callum who also suffer from their “connectedness” and to those close to them.

A risky, provocative novel with some exceptional writing.