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Kathrine Kressmann Taylor (1903–1996)

Autor(a) de Address Unknown

11+ Works 1,364 Membros 78 Críticas 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Katherine Kressmann Taylor

Obras por Kathrine Kressmann Taylor

Address Unknown (1938) 1,243 exemplares
Day of No Return (2001) 47 exemplares
Ainsi mentent les hommes (2008) 25 exemplares
Diary of Florence in flood (1967) 19 exemplares
Ainsi rêvent les femmes (2006) 14 exemplares
Jours d'orage (2008) 11 exemplares
2002 1 exemplar
Adresát neznámý (2003) 1 exemplar
Adressat unbekannt 1 exemplar
Adresse ukjent 1 exemplar

Associated Works

The Best American Short Stories 1954 (1954) — Contribuidor — 4 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Outros nomes
Taylor, Kressman (pseudonym)
Kressmann, Kathrine (birth)
Rood, Kathrine (second marriage)
Data de nascimento
1903
Data de falecimento
1996
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Portland, Oregon, USA
Local de falecimento
Hennepin, Minnesota, USA
Locais de residência
San Francisco, California, USA
Florence, Italy
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Educação
University of Oregon (1924)
Ocupações
copywriter
Professor of Creative Writing
novelist
short story writer
Relações
Rood, John (husband)
Organizações
Gettysburg College

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Kathrine Kressmann was born in Portland, Oregon. She studied English literature and journalism at the University of Oregon, where she graduated in 1924. She moved to San Francisco, and in 1928, she married Elliott Taylor, an editor and owner of an advertising agency. During the Great Depression, the couple lived on a farm in Southern Oregon before moving to New York City. She and her family moved to a farm in Pennsylvania, where she taught at Gettysburg College. After retiring in 1966, she moved to Florence, Italy. In 1967, Taylor remarried to John Rood, a sculptor, and divided her time between Minneapolis, Minnesota, and a villa near Florence.

Membros

Críticas

This is very good, but hard to review without giving the whole story away. It is also short.

Imagine going through some old letters, say from a great uncle or similar who is no longer with us. For many of us we have the general era context, but as you sit and read these, some of the particulars and day-to-day impacts of the larger events come to light. You get a view from both inside Germany, and from one political view, and outside from another political and spiritual viewpoint. Two lifelong friends, and business colleagues are torn apart by events beyond their control. The poignancy, loss, and yet the sheer underlying determination and hope comes through. It illuminates how the mundane and everyday is influenced by the world, and yet the same is sometimes manipulated by the smaller day-to-day or mundane.

I think this should be read by more people, and not just in light of modern events happening now. I can see why it won the awards it did.

4.5 stars.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Kiri | 74 outras críticas | Dec 24, 2023 |
I'm surprised that I had never heard of this book until a couple years ago, particularly given the timing of the writing.

This is short but impactful. I agree with another reviewer who said it would've been nice to see a more gradual progression with Martin's attitude and beliefs, but given the length of the book, it's understandable that it is the way it is.
 
Assinalado
RachelRachelRachel | 74 outras críticas | Nov 21, 2023 |
Shattered the earth I've been standing on for a few seconds. Powerful.
 
Assinalado
breathstealer | 74 outras críticas | Sep 19, 2023 |
Address Unknown by Kathrine Kressmann Taylor is an epistolary novella that features a series of fictional letters between Max Eisenstein, a German-American art dealer of Jewish faith living in San Francisco and his friend and business partner, Martin Schulse who has recently returned to Germany with his family. Together they owned and operated Schulse-Eisenstein Galleries in San Francisco.

The series of eighteen letters (and one cablegram) stretches from 1932 when Martin moves back to Munich and ends in 1934 and follows a timeline in pre-WW2 Europe charting Hitler’s gradual ascent to power and the strengthening of anti-Semitic sentiments resulting in persecution Jews. Parallel to the changes in the political landscape and ideology in Nazi Germany we see the disintegration of what we can assume was a long-standing friendship. We see, on the one hand, the changes in Martin’s attitude and commitment towards his friendship with Max and his growing devotion to Hitler and Nazism on the other. Max, initially, is hopeful that their friendship would remain unaffected and attempts to remind Martin of the liberal beliefs they shared before Martin’s departure.

“But there is another realm where we can always find something true, the fireside of a friend, where we shed our little conceits and find warmth and understanding, where small selfishnesses are impossible and where wine and books and talk give a different meaning to existence. There we have made something that no falseness can touch. We are at home.”

We witness how Martin emerges from his initial hesitation over Hitler’s agenda(“Yet cautiously to myself I ask, a leader to where? Despair overthrown often turns us in mad directions.”) to a fully indoctrinated and committed Nazi (his reference to Hitler as the “Glorious Leader”).

“I have never hated the individual Jew–yourself I have always cherished as a friend, but you will know that I speak in all honesty when I say I have loved you, not because of your race but in spite of it.”

Martin denounces liberalism as “musty sentimentalizing” and stands firm in his decision to distance himself from Max lest he loses favor with the Nazi party or is viewed as a traitor. (“Do you know what it is to be taken to a concentration camp?”, he writes to Max). His words portray him as a man who is slowly being brainwashed into believing that the oppression and persecution of the Jewish population would result in establishing a “superior” race and securing a great future for Germany. The darkness within him and his loss of humanity is evident in his refusal to help Griselle, Max’s sister with whom he once shared a romantic relationship, when she approaches him for help - an act that ultimately forces Max’s hand.

Written in 1938, this novella was inspired by the changes the author noted in her own German friends who were influenced by Nazism upon returning to Germany. Even though the timeline of this novella pre-dates WW2, it remains just as powerful and relevant to this very day. At approximately sixty-six pages, this is a short but impactful read that will leave a lasting impression. This is an important book, the kind of book that is meant to be read, shared, and never forgotten. In the introduction to this book , Margot Livesey aptly sums up the timelessness of the central theme of this thought-provoking novella.

“How do we know what we know, and when do we know it? Why does a good person become a bad person? What power does a citizen have against the state?”
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
srms.reads | 74 outras críticas | Sep 4, 2023 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
11
Also by
1
Membros
1,364
Popularidade
#18,851
Avaliação
4.2
Críticas
78
ISBN
101
Línguas
12
Marcado como favorito
1

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