Showing posts with label The Three Nations Trilogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Three Nations Trilogy. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

"The Black Eagle Inn (The Three Nations Trilogy, Book 3)" by Christoph Fischer

GIVEAWAY
NEW RELEASE
The Black Eagle Inn
(The Three Nations Trilogy, Book 3)
by Christoph Fischer


This is the third in my special feature on The Three Nations Trilogy, celebrating the release of the last book in the series, The Black Eagle Inn. Make sure you enter the giveaway below for your chance to win a copy of this book. You can also check out my blog post on the first book in the series, The Luck of the Weissensteiners, and my blog post on the second book, Sebastian.

Description
How does a Nation recover from its collective shame, how does it rebuild itself into a modern state and deal with its horrendous past and the difficult path ahead? Restructuring of the political landscape & the influence of religion are strong themes in this historical family saga & post war drama set in Germany 1940 - 1976.
The Black Eagle Inn is an old established restaurant and part of a family farm business in the sleepy Bavarian countryside outside of Heimkirchen. Childless Anna Stockmann has fought hard to make it her own and keep it running through WWII. The family is divided by rivalry between family members since her own youth but at the heart of this story one of Anna’s nephews, Markus, owns her heart and another nephew, Lukas, owns her ear, while her husband Herbert is still missing-in-action.
Religion dictates life in Heimkirchen's enclosed Catholic community that was almost unaffected by the fighting in the war. Anna’s brother Hans-Ulrich is involved in the church as well as in post war party politics. He finds that the new generation, his own off spring, are not functioning as well as the older one would like. Bitter conflicts arise in the new forming Germany and the family members all need to decide how to respond to the challenges ahead.
This is war fiction without immediate war, it is literary history about Germany after the Nazi rule with gay, racial, religious and feminist themes, describing the way one family experiences the forward move of a shamed Nation.
Fischer tells a great family saga with war in the far background and weaves the political and religious into the personal with belated or indirect impact of war on people.

Excerpt
During the early stages of the new war, a time when victory was certain and - in the view of everyone in Heimkirchen - completely inevitable, the baby Maria Hinterberger was born; it was a Saturday evening in September 1940 and absolutely nothing seemed to be able to stop Hitler and the German nation.
The small Bavarian town – like the rest of the country – had already been thoroughly ‘cleansed’ of the very few Jews, Communists and other ‘subversive’ elements that had found their way to this little backward and hidden corner of the world. There was no one left for the enthusiastic supporters of the Fuhrer to focus their hatred on but the Russians, the French and the British.
German troops had made remarkable progress everywhere in Europe and despite what the deeply religious Hinterberger family and some other citizens of Heimkirchen secretly thought of Hitler and his hateful politics, the military success promised a great future for the nation and left the people on the streets with wonderful feelings of optimism and curiosity.
All the posters sent there from Berlin, warning of Communists and Jews, seemed totally out of place and unnecessary. The city was in total harmony with their leadership - at least that was how the population of Heimkirchen would appear to any outsider passing through the town. On this beautiful early autumn day it was easy to forget about the war.
Being the fifth child Maria caused her mother Magdalena comparatively little pain in the way of labour. The first signs of an impending delivery had – rather conveniently - started moments before lunch was being served, leaving just enough time to feed the other four children and send for the midwife before things became more complicated.
Magdalena was a beautiful woman, whose body seemed to have suffered little damage from giving birth four times already. Born herself at the beginning of the Great War Magdalena had learned to keep quiet and not to bother her own worried mother with any demands of her own.
The latest addition to the family arrived with what felt like consideration for the pregnant woman’s other duties. Magdalena could not have chosen a better moment for this birth had she been asked to and this gift for convenience and timing made the new child utterly likeable, albeit easily forgettable in the context of the bigger and more dramatic picture.
She had inherited her mother’s long and thin nose, her green eyes and dark blonde hair, she was of average size and weight for a new born and had few remarkable physical features and to a mother of five it came as a relief to have at least one child that was so easy to handle.
From the smooth way that Maria had come to her today Magdalena already sensed that this child was special and would not cause her as much grief as her siblings had. Little did Magdalena know how wrong she was.
Magdalena had never really wanted to have that many children. Uneducated and naïve she truly believed for far too long that who had children and who didn’t was the Lord’s will regardless of their night time activities in the bedroom. Her husband, Hans-Ulrich, told her on their wedding night that every married couple had to perform this act daily, so it would not be the couple’s lower urges that dictated reproduction but the Good Lord himself. He himself had only heard this from a friend at school, and Magdalena believed him, just as he had believed his classmate.

Review
An epic masterpiece, Black Eagle Inn, by the very talented Christoph Fischer has concluded his brilliant trilogy with this his best yet. From the gripping first traumatic pages through to the surprising end this read does not disappoint. The characters are compelling and we can't help falling in love with Maria and her family, flawed and imperfect as they all are, they are who we are, who we love, who we struggle within our daily lives, who support us and help us have a sense of worth, they are the best and worst of the human condition expressed through gripping dialogues and historical scenes. Black Eagle Inn burns its image into the heart and mind of the reader, and lingers on for days after the last page is closed. Highly recommend and will definitely read again.

About the Author
Christoph Fischer was born in Germany as the son of a Sudeten-German father and a Bavarian mother. Not a full local in the eyes and ears of his peers, he developed an ambiguous sense of belonging and home in Bavaria. He moved to Hamburg in pursuit of his studies and to lead a life of literary indulgence. After a few years he moved on to the UK where he is still resident today.
The Luck of the Weissensteiners, the first book in The Three Nations Trilogy, is Christoph's first published work. Sebastian, the second book in the series, was released in May 2013. The last book in trilogy, The Black Eagle Inn, has just been released.
Christoph is also a reviewer of independent books and on his recommendation pages on this site he features interviews and reviews of the books that have most captured his attention and appreciation by genre.

Giveaway
Christoph has kindly donated an ebook copy of The Black Eagle Inn for our giveaway. Please show your appreciation by entering below.

Links



Sunday, October 13, 2013

"Sebastian (The Three Nations Trilogy, Book 2)" by Christoph Fischer

GIVEAWAY
Sebastian
(The Three Nations Trilogy, Book 2)
by Christoph Fischer


This is the second in my special feature on The Three Nations Trilogy, leading up to release of the last book in the series on 15 October. Today we feature the second book in the trilogy, Sebastian. Make sure you enter the giveaway below for your chance to win a copy of this book. You can also check out my previous blog post on the first book, The Luck of the Weissensteiners. Coming soon - The Black Eagle Inn.

Description
Sebastian is the story of a young man who, due to an unfortunate accident, has his leg amputated shortly before World War I. When his father is drafted to the war it falls to him to run the family grocery store in Vienna, to grow into his responsibilities, bear loss and uncertainty, and hopefully find love.
Sebastian Schreiber, his extended family, their friends and the store employees experience the ‘golden days’ of pre-war Vienna, the time of war and the end of the Monarchy, while trying to make a living and to preserve what they hold dear.
Fischer brilliantly describes life in Vienna during the war years; how it affected the people in an otherwise safe and prosperous location, the beginning of the end for the monarchic system , the arrival of modern thoughts and trends, the Viennese class system and the end of an era.
As in the first book of the trilogy, The Luck of the Weissensteiners, we are confronted again with themes of identity, nationality and borders. The step back in time from Book 1 and the change of location from Slovakia to Austria enables the reader to see the parallels and the differences deliberately out of sequential order, so as not to see one as the consequence of the other, but to experience them as the reality it must have felt like for people at the time.

Excerpt
Before his new line of work, he had avoided using crutches and a walking stick at any cost, too vain and proud to show any dependence like it. Now he didn’t care anymore whether ten or twenty people threw degrading remarks at him. If his dignity was already compromised on a regular basis then it did not make much of a difference if he himself accentuated the problem more than he would have liked otherwise. His stump rewarded him for the new and more attentive care by growing stronger and healthier.
Vera eventually forced Sebastian to subject himself to an examination by the dreaded Dr Rosenzweig – just to be sure that there was no further damage that the young teacher might keep to himself.
“Now this is how I would have liked the scar tissue to look last year,” the impertinent and arrogant man said loudly. “If you had only listened to me from the beginning!”
Vera and Sebastian looked sheepish. If only her friend Mathilde had been here, Vera thought, they could have asked the doctor how he had been able to keep his safe position away from the front in the clinic, rather than having to man a field hospital nearer the front line of the war. He might have been too old and unfit for war duties but it was odd to think that he could evade the tough decisions of the labour and war ministries.
As if he had read her mind he added: “I am taking up a new position at the General Hospital next week on the Emperor’s personal request. Such routine examinations are not something I will be able to attend to in the future. You better make sure that you keep looking after yourself,” he said to Sebastian. “If I have to choose between giving a morphine ration to someone who lost his leg in the line of duty to the throne, and someone who just wouldn’t take my advice, I know to whom I would give it. Do you understand?”
“Yes we understand,” Vera replied for her son. “Can I just say, now that our professional contact has come to an end, that you are the most impertinent and unkind of doctors I have encountered in my life. Your manners put your profession to shame.”
Red in her face with rage she made for the door, signalling Sebastian who was still in the process of getting dressed again to follow her.
“I will not be sorry to see you go either, Frau Schreiber,” he replied sharply. “If people like you didn’t waste our precious time and resources with unnecessary drama or self-inflicted worsening of your conditions, then the medical supplies of this city would be a lot better. Now, if you would like to see yourself out, I have clients that are more deserving of my time.”
“Good bye. May God punish you!” Vera said before closing the door.
Dr Rosenzweig laughed at this last remark of hers but after she had gone he fell silent and played nervously with his moustache.

Review
When a book opens before you, you expect to enter into a new reality - here, it is dropped upon you with a rarely seen immediacy. From the very first sentence, when the Serbian doctor tells Vera, "I am afraid I won't be able to save his leg," you understand in your bones how hard she tries to remain composed, so as not to frighten her son. Having stepped on a rusty nail, Sebastian has been hiding his injury from her, which is about to cost him dearly: the amputation of his leg, and the blow to the way he perceives himself at this sensitive age, both of which will eventually drive him to find his bearings, as he must. And not only he must overcome the limitations of his handicap, and come into his own-so must other characters, such as his frail mother. This is a time of war. We must all grow up. We must all find our inner power.
The author, Christoph Fischer, has drawn life in Vienna with vivid detail, illustrating the intricacies of the pre-World War I era with great imagination, which is underpinned by careful research of historical aspects. As the father leaves for war, Sebastian is charged with being the man in the family; not an easy task for any young man, and it is even more of a challenge for Sebastian. His is an imbalanced, stilted world, controlled by the women left behind, both his mother and the mother of his beloved Margit, who makes her daughter leave him and follow her to Galicia, in search of her father. I was reminded of several women in my own family, and smiled with awe and affection at the amazing (if sometimes annoying) power and initiative of Jewish mothers...
I am yet to read the first part of The Three Nations Trilogy, The Luck of the Weissensteiners. But to tell you the truth, sometimes I like reading one volume of a trilogy out of order, to see if it holds on its own. Sebastian does.
Highly recommended.

About the Author
Christoph Fischer was born in Germany as the son of a Sudeten-German father and a Bavarian mother. Not a full local in the eyes and ears of his peers, he developed an ambiguous sense of belonging and home in Bavaria. He moved to Hamburg in pursuit of his studies and to lead a life of literary indulgence. After a few years he moved on to the UK where he is still resident today.
The Luck of the Weissensteiners, the first book in The Three Nations Trilogy, is Christoph's first published work. Sebastian, the second book in the series, was released in May 2013. The last book in trilogy, The Black Eagle Inn, will be released shortly.
Christoph is also a reviewer of independent books and on his recommendation pages on this site he features interviews and reviews of the books that have most captured his attention and appreciation by genre.

Giveaway
Christoph has kindly donated an ebook copy of Sebastian for our giveaway. Please show your appreciation by entering below.

Links



Friday, October 11, 2013

"The Luck of the Weissensteiners (The Three Nations Trilogy, Book 1)" by Christoph Fischer

INTERVIEW and GIVEAWAY
The Luck of the Weissensteiners
(The Three Nations Trilogy, Book 1)
by Christoph Fischer


This is the first of my special series on the Three Nations Trilogy, leading up to release of the last book in the series on 15 October. Today Christoph stops by for an interview to talk about his first book, The Luck of the Weissensteiners. Make sure you enter the giveaway below for your chance to win a copy of this book. Stop by again over the next few days to find out about the next two books in this series, Sebastian and The Black Eagle Inn.

Description
In the sleepy town of Bratislava in 1933 a romantic girl falls for a bookseller from Berlin. Greta Weissensteiner, daughter of a Jewish weaver, slowly settles in with the Winkelmeier clan just as the developments in Germany start to make waves in Europe and re-draws the visible and invisible borders. The political climate in the multifaceted cultural jigsaw puzzle of disintegrating Czechoslovakia becomes more complex and affects relations between the couple and the families. The story follows them through the war with its predictable and also its unexpected turns and events and the equally hard times after.
But this is no ordinary romance; in fact it is not a romance at all, but a powerful, often sad, Holocaust story. What makes The Luck of the Weissensteiners so extraordinary is the chance to consider the many different people who were never in concentration camps, never in the military, yet who nonetheless had their own indelible Holocaust experiences. This is a wide-ranging, historically accurate exploration of the connections between social location, personal integrity and, as the title says, luck.

Excerpt
Wilhelm with his good looks could have his pick of the girls and his eyes were clearly set on Greta, which secretly made Jonah a very proud father.
“Does he not mind you being Jewish, that German book boy?” Jonah asked her one evening over dinner.
“I am not sure he even knows yet,” Greta told him. “The way he talks about the Jews, it doesn't seem to have any reference to me at all.”
“How does he talk about the Jews?” Jonah said with raised eyebrows.
“He just mentions them in passing, like... so and so is a Jew so we do not have his books in our shop. I don't think he has an opinion about it himself,” Greta guessed.
“But the name Weissensteiner, that is a Jewish name! He must know,” insisted Jonah. “I often wished we could have changed that. It would make life easier, wouldn't it?”
“It only sounds Jewish to you because you know that it is,” disagreed Greta. “It could pass as a German name to a naïve young man, which I think Wilhelm just might be.”
“In that case you should bring the matter up soon before this 'book lending' goes any further,” Jonah lectured.
“He seems very smitten with you my darling daughter. It wouldn't hurt to get it out of the way before you waste any more of your time on him or any of his time on you, unless of course you were only in it for the books?”
“No I am not just in it for the books father,” she admitted. “I like him. I think I really like him. He is very interesting. He thinks a lot.”
“Oh he thinks a lot does he?” Jonah said with a little sarcasm in his voice. “Then it is important that he learns to do something as well, thinking alone will only give him a headache.”
“Do you like him father?” Greta asked, ignoring his previous statement.
“Does it matter if I like him? You must like the goy and make sure he does not mind your family,” her father warned. “I'll like him enough if he makes you happy; even if he thinks all day until his head hurts. If a thinker you want, a thinker you shall have. You have the pick of the men, my beautiful. Trust me. Make sure you chose a good man and that you do really like him.”
“I do like him, father. He seems such a gentle man from what I can tell from our short meetings but I still need to get to know him better,” she admitted.
“You take as long as you like to make up your mind. I hope you realise that he has already made up his mind about you. It is written all over his face how enchanted he is. He could accuse you of playing with him if you let him visit this often and your decision is not the one he hopes for. You must not lead him on. Be careful, you know, because I don't think we need to wait much longer for a proposal from this one.”
“I am not so sure. There are plenty of girls who make eyes at him, maybe he just loves talking about books. That could be all he wants from me,” Greta said more to herself than to her father.
“Yes, if you were a fifty year old librarian that probably would be all,” Jonah said with a roaring laugh. “Why is he not content talking about his Goethe with the old men in his book shop then? I tell you why, they are not his type. Always remember that men of his young age mainly think with their loins. Once they have satisfied such needs, they may not be interested in your views on books anymore and go back to the shop to discuss literature there. An attractive girl like yourself always needs to choose wisely.”
“I don't think he is like that, he is so serious,” Greta defended.
“Yes he is serious, the Germans often are. Now let’s hope his seriousness is good for something and makes him worthy of you,” Jonah laughed.

Review
We've all studied World War II in history classes and some of us are old enough to have had relatives who fought in the war. For me, it was always somewhat abstract. The brilliant author, Christoph Fischer, bring the war alive through characters who live every horrible minute of it. The struggles of the family and extended family are unbelievable. And we think we're struggling when the cable doesn't work or our cell phones aren't charged!
In movies about World War II, it seems that action becomes far more important than relationships. But in this excellent book, relationships trump action. The book beautifully explores the struggles of a family and how each of them is affected by the war. This is an up close look at the hardships and tragedies this family endured. The characters are wonderfully drawn: Wilma, Johanna, Greta, Wilhelm, and all the rest. The author juxtaposes the horrors of war with individuals' acts of kindness. A juxtaposition that might not work in less capable hands. I learned more about that area of the world in that time frame than I ever did in any classroom situation. Should be mandatory reading in every history class. A tour de force and I can't recommend it highly enough! Bravo, Mr. Fischer!

Interview With the Author
Hi Christoph Fischer, thanks for joining me today to discuss your first book, The Luck of the Weissensteiners.
Which writers have influenced you the most?
That is a difficult question to answer simply because I have read a lot and over the years I have come across so many talented and amazing writers. Which ones have actually influenced me and my own writing would be difficult for me to tell myself. I adore Lionel Shriver and Christos Tsiolkas for their raw and sharp powers of observation and their uncompromising ways of speaking the truth. It is something I aspire to but I doubt that I am like them. For The Luck of the Weissensteiners, Stefan Zweig and Siegfried Lenz were probably important influences.
Which age group do you recommend your book for?
I guess any age from 14 or so onwards. There is not much violence in the book given that it is set during war times, but how much the little sensitive scenes that I had to include will be perceived by a fragile young soul is hard to tell. The book is however by no means “graphic” or “adult-themed”.
What sparked the idea for this book?
The idea came from my own family background and research I did in the field. My family comes from the former Czechoslovakian areas, although they were German speaking, part of the minority that gave Hitler the excuse for laying claim to those territories. As child I was never interested in the history. My father died when I was young and suddenly there was no source for information. I started to research the country and its history and with some family tales in mind I began to write and fill in the gaps. Then of course the story kept changing as I wrote it and the characters took on a life of their own and gave me no options how to continue.
Which comes first? The character’s story or the idea for the novel?
I had certain ideas about the characters I wanted to write about but as I said before, they were stubborn creatures who would not obey my plans for their lives. During the entire writing period I continuously read about the history or at least read novels that were set in that era to keep myself committed to the setting. I was in the story together with my heroes, and what I had originally planned seemed out of place, impossible or boring.
What was the hardest part to write in this book?
The title implies that there is luck involved in this story and many scenes that would have been very convenient for me as the writer in terms of plot development I could not bring myself to write. On the other hand there are some stereotypes that a Holocaust story needs to be realistic but which I was desperate not to make a simple repetition of what has already been done.
How do you hope this book affects its readers?
I hope it will add to people’s perception and awareness of the time. We have heard about the big dramas and the main victims of the Holocaust. I try to tell stories of a smaller scale, the story of lesser but all the same difficult and painful misfortunes. There are so many books about the war but I keep finding new eye witness reports and life stories that teach me additional dimensions of the tragedy. Feeling a little what life then might have been like for smaller and less prominent victims may help to have more compassion and turn a few of the large numbers and statistics into human beings.
How long did it take you to write this book?
I researched and read history books about the time for a few months while still writing a smaller novel. Then I wrote for three months solid. I re-wrote the book several times until I finally had the guts to let it go and share the story with the world.
What advice do you have for someone who would like to become a published writer?
Believe in yourself, don’t compare yourself only to the great writers. Find out what your strengths and weaknesses are and focus on them but always stay true to yourself. It is hard to find your audience but it is out there. Keep going. There are a lot of helpful people out there to help you in the virtual indie world. If you are reading this you already have come across some of them: the selfless people behind this website.
Thanks, Christoph! What do you like to do when you’re not writing?
I have three dogs which I take out for walks twice a day. I love reading of course, a bit of comedy TV and travelling. I take an interest in Reiki, Shiatsu, Tai Chi and meditation, I like running and cycling, jigsaw puzzles, philosophy, psychology and history.
What does your family think of your writing?
My brother has already written a few books long before I even started, so when I came out with my own novel they were not as surprised as I had hoped. They have been very supportive but they live in Germany still and I write in English. Some of them find it hard to follow my stories in a foreign language and my German is so rusty, my own attempts at translation sounded awful.
Please tell us a bit about your childhood.
I am the youngest of three siblings and the youngest but one of 11 cousins who were all very close. I spoke in my father’s accent and not the local Bavarian one so I always felt a little bit out of place and turned into a bit of a loner. I did have however a lot of lovely people around me and had a happy childhood. My teenage years were not so great, slightly overshadowed by the death of my mother and personal identity issues. But as they say, these things make you stronger and had it not been for these tragedies I would not have become the book-loving person that I am.
Did you enjoy school?
I did at first but then my interests were outside the school lessons and I started to get bored. I was still too playful and inattentive. I wasted a lot of good opportunities to learn useful and interesting stuff that I now have to learn about by myself.
Did you like reading?
I loved reading but not always what I was meant to read. Enid Blyton and the likes, nothing serious. I was also much more into pop music and could take or leave books. Only after I was too old for comic strips did I start reading “good books”.
When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
Four years ago I wrote a course manual. A tarot card reader had once predicted I would be writing books and I remembered that during the work on that manual. I started to write down a little short story and when it had developed into a novel of 190 pages I thought that maybe I should try writing more. After I had written six novels in raw drafts I decided to put the first one out there.
Did your childhood experiences influence your writing?
No, I think mostly my adult experiences.
What are your favourite books?
The Neverending Story was one of the first ones that got me excited. Later on Heimatmuseum by Siegfried Lenz, The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, and The Book Thief by Markus Zusak.
The Book Thief is one of my favorites, too. Who are your favourite authors?
Do you hear from your readers much? What kinds of things do they say?
So far I have had a lot of positive feedback. The ones that have got in touch have been very complimentary. They enjoyed the characters and what they learned about the times. I am still anxiously waiting for the first hard critique of the novel. I am quite amazed. Writing in a foreign language and this being my first novel I feel at times rather vulnerable when I see a new review and expect it to be a return to the harsh reality that I cannot write.
I don't think there's much chance of that. You currently have 67 5-star reviews on Amazon! What can we look forward to from you in the future?
This book is part of the Three Nations Trilogy. Book two and three are already written. Sebastian is the next instalment and it is about a boy in Vienna in the 1910s. The trilogy is theme based, not chronological and does not feature the same characters. Sebastian focuses on the fall of the Habsburg Empire in Austria and on a young man who has had his leg amputated and still needs to support his family through the war. The last book in the trilogy, The Black Eagle Inn, will be released shortly.
The themes for my books beyond the trilogy are mental health, Alzheimers and more war stories.
Thanks so much for stopping by today. I wish you all the best for your future projects.

About the Author
Christoph Fischer was born in Germany as the son of a Sudeten-German father and a Bavarian mother. Not a full local in the eyes and ears of his peers, he developed an ambiguous sense of belonging and home in Bavaria. He moved to Hamburg in pursuit of his studies and to lead a life of literary indulgence. After a few years he moved on to the UK where he is still resident today.
The Luck of The Weissensteiners, the first book in The Three Nations Trilogy, is Christoph's first published work. Sebastian, the second book in the series, was released in May 2013. The last book in trilogy, The Black Eagle Inn, will be released shortly.
Christoph is also a reviewer of independent books and on his recommendation pages on this site he features interviews and reviews of the books that have most captured his attention and appreciation by genre.

Giveaway
Christoph has kindly donated an ebook copy of The Luck of the Weissensteiners for our giveaway. Please show your appreciation by entering below.

Links