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A tragicomic satire from the heart of East Germany.
Gabriela grows up in the East German town of Leibnitz. Her father is a famous surgeon, her mother a respected society hostess. The girl, however, struggles to fulfil their expectations. She shows no talent as a violinist and, worse, she fails to choose the right friends at school. When her father falls out of favour with the communists, Gabriela drops out of school. Eventually she ends up living beneath a canal bridge. Then the Wall falls. Can Gabriela seize a second chance in the new, united, Germany?
Why Peirene chose to publish this book:
'When I pass homeless women, I look into their faces and wonder: why her and not me? I sense that maybe our differences are not as great as I would like to believe. Dance by the Canal tells the story of a woman who fails to find her place in society - neither in communist GDR nor in the capitalist West. Her refusal to conform to the patriarchal structures of both societies forces her into ever-increasing isolation. This book will make you think.' Meike Ziervogel, publisher at Peirene Press
'An intense story… grotesque, macabre, poetic.'Neues Deutschland
'An authentic story of East Germany.' Die Ost-West-Wochenzeitung
'30 years of East German history narrated with laconic irony.' Die Zeit
105 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1994

– Noble Anhaltinian stock, said Chief Medical Officer Ernst von Haßlau.He refuses to permit his daughter should to join the sanctioned youth organisations thus ensuring she is set further apart from her peers. Her parents both disapprove of her one and only friend, “Katka, the smallest, fattest and dirtiest among the girls in 1a” and so, from a very early age, Gabriella becomes used to living, and becomes comfortable living, two separate lives, for two months at least until she’s caught “walking arm in arm with Katka [having] stolen pick and white peppermint stick” she was never allowed at home. Then it’s off to the psychologist with her. Society disapproves of her; her parents disapprove of her; what’s a girl to do?
– A bourgeois relic, said our teacher Fräulein Brinkmann.