My Father's Country

My Father's Country

by Shaun Whiteside (Translator), Wibke Bruhns (Author)

Synopsis

In August 1944, Hans Georg Klamroth was tried and executed for his part in the 20 July plot to assassinate Hitler. Wibke Bruhns, his youngest daughter, was six years old at the time. Decades later, watching a documentary about the events of 20 July, images of her father in the Third Reich People's Court appeared on the screen. 'I stare at this man with the lifeless expression. I don't know him...But I can see myself in him - his eyes are my eyes, I know that I look like him...I wouldn't be me, without him.' In My Father's Country, Bruhns tells of her search for her father. Returning to Halberstadt in Northern Germany, where her ancestors the Klamroth family lived and worked for generations, she retraces the story from Kaiser Wilhelm to the end of World War Two, discovering old photographs, letters and diaries, which she uses to piece together a unique and unforgettable family epic. Engaging with her family on both an emotional and political level, My Father's Country is a memoir that is also a remarkable work of history, powerfully told and deeply moving.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Publisher: William Heinemann
Published: 06 Mar 2008

ISBN 10: 0434013323
ISBN 13: 9780434013326
Book Overview: The story of a German family from the late nineteenth century through WWI to WWII and after. A huge bestseller in Germany, it offers extraordinarily moving and riveting insight into the experience of being German in the last century, fit to stand alongside Gitta Sereny's biography of Albert Speer or Bernhard Schlink's The Reader.

Media Reviews
What an extraordinary story. I was spellbound... In the final stages, as the terrible finale approaches, I was almost too moved and appalled to go on reading - but also too moved and appalled to stop... A treasure -- Michael Frayn . A heart-rending, brave, utterly convincing book. You cannot read it without being moved to the core Die Zeit A sensational book, which almost effortlessly answers the question of all questions: How could it have come to this? Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung A fascinating blend of private chronicle, contemporary history and a personal search for identity Der Spiegel Bruhns' elegant and lovingly written memoir [is] a compulsive read...a multilayered and moving tale of deceit and betrayal Financial Times Magazine
Author Bio
Wibke Bruhns was born in 1938 in Halberstadt. She has worked as a journalist in both TV and print and as a TV presenter and news reader. She has worked as a correspondent for Stern magazine in the US and Israel and headed the culture section at one of Germany's largest radio stations, ORB. She has two grown-up daughters and now lives and works as a freelance writer in Berlin.