cover image To Die in Spring

To Die in Spring

Ralf Rothmann, trans. from the German by Shaun Whiteside. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $26 (224p) ISBN 978-0-374-27814-4

This brilliant novel from German author Rothmann (Knife Edge) follows Walter Urban and his close friend Friedrich, two adolescent dairy farm workers in northern Germany, during the waning months of World War II. While out drinking at a local beer hall, they were coerced into enlisting in the German army by SS officers. The unnamed narrator, Walter’s son, pieces together his father’s wartime experience in the present day, after Walter’s death, by constructing the few factual details available to him into a vivid narrative that reveals the horrors of war and a traumatic event that changed Walter’s life. Spare and elegant, the novel paints a quietly harrowing picture of the lasting effects of human violence and offers brief, poignant glimpses into the natural world (especially when members of the animal kingdom wander unknowingly into the war zone). Directly confronting issues of responsibility, accountability, and legacy, this is an undeniably powerful work. (Aug.)