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The 2003 Award

The Dark Room

by Rachel Seiffert


Nominated by:

  • Universitats-und Landesbibliothek Bonn, Bonn, Germany
  • Waterford County Library, Waterford, Ireland

The Dark Room by Rachel Seiffert

Publisher of Nominated Edition: Heinemann ISBN 0434009865

the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors.
ABOUT THE BOOK
The Dark Room tells the stories of three ordinary Germans: Helmut, a young photographer in Berlin in the 1930s who uses his craft to express his patriotic fervour; Lore, a twelve-year-old girl who in 1945 guides her young siblings across a devastated Germany after her Nazi parents are seized by the Allies; and, fifty years later, Micha, a young teacher obsessed with what his living grandfather did in the war, struggling to deal with the past of his family and his country.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rachel Seiffert was born in Oxford, England in 1971, the daughter of a German mother and an Australian father. She now lives in Berlin. The Dark Room is her first novel.
Reader Review

Photographs and photography loom large in this novel about Germany's Nazi past - the dark room as it were. There are three separate narratives tracing the emerging consciousness for Germans of what Nazism actually represented. In the first section, Helmut, a young disabled man, unfit for military service, finds fulfillment in photography and is unquestioning in his support for the regime. In the next section, we meet a young family of five children as the war draws to a close. Their parents are prominent Nazi activists likely to be arrested by the advancing Americans and the children, led by Hannelore, the eldest girl, travel mostly on foot from Bavaria to their grandmother in Hamburg, mingling along the way with hordes of people then on the move in Germany at the end of the war. Hannelore becomes dimly aware that there is something shameful, best hidden, about her parents and destroys photographs to prevent identification. The final and most complex section is set in the 1990s with Michael, a young teacher, trying to face up to the fact that his grandfather, an SS officer on the eastern front, was probably a war criminal. Could the man in the photograph be guilty of murdering Jews.

The style in the first twos sections is spare, telling in a matter-of-fact way a story essentially of survival. The final section is much more introspective with Michael fearfully peeling back the layers of family history afraid of what he might find.

This is a thoughtful utterly compelling book which would be on my IMPAC Dublin shortlist.

Raheny Library Readers' Group Member

Find out more about the author on the following websites:

Read an excerpt from The Dark Room

Review of Seiffert's The Dark Room

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