This is an amazing text. What a portrait of a teen-to-young Jewish woman returning to Germany after the war. She returns with her family, who had emigrated to Kenya. Autobiographical fiction is a new genre for me and this story, the sequel to Nowhere in Africa, is precious and poignant.
To hear about this time, in her perspective, and in the nuances of everyday life, is so eye opening. We see the evolution of her relationship with her father, who featured in the first book, and who drove the return to Germany. We see the transformation of Germany, and her father as a Jewish lawyer in post-war Germany.
We see her coming of age, and her struggles to navigate between her life experiences in Kenya and the country she barely knows as her country of Germany. We see how her mom, her brother, her maid, neighbors, and the community around her navigate. We see the role of social guilt and shame and the legacies of war.
This is an amazing story and one of the most unique narratives I’ve ever read. To have a first person female account told in an interesting personal story format is amazing. Ive spent a lot of time in East Africa, and this weave between Kenya and Germany, post war and late colonialism is powerful. I am so grateful for her writing.