Uwe Johnson, Anniversaries
1. A friend advised me years ago not to read this book. We were discussing her undergraduate degree, which was in German Language and Literature, and my budding interest in the German language. She described it, not incorrectly, as a pretty uninteresting book that goes on and on and spends more time than you might expect simply reporting the contents of that day's New York Times.
2. This might be the first time I have identified with the older characters rather than the point-of-view one. Some of it is a factor of how the story is told: Cresspahl, the father and then grandfather, is younger than I am when the 1930s portion of the story begins. The fact that he ends up older than me is just the linear passage of time. But it's also because his dilemma is a little more relevant to me: he sees clearly in the early 1930s that Germany will involve itself in another war and pretty clearly not long after that that Germany will lose, and begins planning for it. "Preparing your family for a near-term potentially catastrophic future" is not an idle place to find one's mind these days.
It was harder to see, initially, that Gesine is doing the same thing with her daughter: in the face of the relentless U.S. propaganda machine, she tries to move Marie into seeing that there's not so much difference between how communist governments handle their people and how the US handles its people; you can stave off a problem for today, even for a long time, but not forever.
3. I did, in the end, learn about the circumstances of how Cresspahl died and how Marie's father became her father (handled circumspectly, as one might expect in a mother talking to their child), but darned if it wasn't in the last 30 pages of 1600.
4. I liked it.
5. The goal of reading this book was to do something very different than I normally do: the book is a series of daily entries over a year, and I read each day in order on the relevant day. (Plus or minus some time for traveling.) I have read many books in many different ways, but this was a first, spending over a year in continuous effort and not letting myself go further ahead. The book leaves a tremendous wake that multiple other novels at the same time do not really fill. I could do this once, I did it, I will never do its like again.