Dura novela, pero también entrañable. Vamos siguiendo a dos amigos adolescentes en la Alemania del año 1945, cuando el ejército nazi da sus últimos coletazos. Nos enteramos de las ilusiones de ambos amigos y de su llamada a filas. Es, sin duda, una obra antibelicista, que nos muestra los horrores de la guerra y la miseria humana. Asistimos a sentimientos de culpa, pero también de inocencia juvenil. Nos enfrentamos al dilema libertad-destino, amistad-deber. Una buena novela que no nos debe dejar indiferentes ante las situaciones que describe.

Más información sobre el libro
The lunacy of the final months of World War II, as experienced by a young German soldier Distant, silent, often drunk, Walter Urban is a difficult man to have as a father. But his son—the narrator of this slim, harrowing novel—is curious about Walter’s experiences during World War II, and so makes him a present of a blank notebook in which to write down his memories. Walter dies, however, leaving nothing but the barest skeleton of a story on those pages, leading his son to fill in the gaps himself, rightly or wrongly, with what he can piece together of his father’s early life. This, then, is the story of Walter and his dangerously outspoken friend Friedrich Caroli, seventeen-year-old trainee milkers on a dairy farm in northern Germany who are tricked into volunteering for the army during the spring of 1945: the last, and in many ways the worst, months of the war. The men are driven to the point of madness by what they experience, and when Friedrich finally deserts his post, Walter is forced to do the unthinkable. Told in a remarkable impressionistic voice, focusing on the tiny details and moments of grotesque beauty that flower even in the most desperate situations, Ralf Rothmann’s To Die in Spring “ushers in the post–[Günter] Grass era with enormous power” (Die Zeit).
Compra de libros
To die in spring, Ralf Rothmann
- Idioma
- Publicado en
- 2017