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Hardcover Father of the Land Book

ISBN: 0399144978

ISBN13: 9780399144974

Father of the Land

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

"A joy to read, in fact, a book so good one doesn't want it to end.... Kempe has written a piece of contemporary history as it should be written, in clear, engaging prose, and with judicious and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

An excellent introduction

I have used this as the closing text in college courses on modern Germany with great success. It captures the nuances of contemporary Germany rather well: a continuing obsession with order and precision, immigration, a fascination with America, reunification, a new generation's coming to grips with a horrific and inescapable past, and learning to exercise a measured assertiveness in a world still wary of German power. To do all this in such a (relatively) small book and nonetheless remain highly readable is an achievement along the lines of Gordon Craig's *The Germans*. The book is hard to beat as an introduction to contemporary Germany.

Gut begonnen ist halb gewonnen (Well begun is half done)

Indeed, Kempe's search provides intrinsic insight into the contemporary, German psyche that avoids historical pedagogy, monotony, and trite narrative. Each chapter reveals its relevance through Kempe's relating of personal, sometimes poignant anecdotes that reveal current issues in German politics and culture. Acknowledging his strong German heritage and personal interest, Kempe takes a critical point-of-view on some of Germany's present/recent past issues: conflicts with the Turks (Germany's largest ethnic minority), Germany's military engagement in Bosnia, etc. However, what truly makes Kempe's work unique is his interweaving of past and present, his personal railing against his Nazi grandfather's heinous crimes and acquittal and praise of modern Germany's informed policies. As Kempe urges and accomplishes himself, the Germans must exact courage in the face of their history and the favorable situation they now find themselves in, for as Geibel once said, "When there is nothing more awesome than fate, it is courage that will bear without a shutter."

German peacekeepers in Bosnia represents a turning point.

Kempe spends time interviewing several different "normal" Germans and reveals the complexity of German life 50 years after the Third Reich. A non-immigration country with a liberal immigration policy and a burgeoning Turkish-German population. A military peacekeeping force in the same land terrorized by Nazis two generations earlier; young soldiers are shocked by the brutality they see around them. This book shatters many of the stereotypes we Americans have about how Germans are, or should be, today. As the descendant of German immigrants, I especially appreciated Kempe's description of his emotions as he gradually uncovered and faced his relative's complicity in Germany's dark legacy. Highly recommended.

A Must-Read for German Americans and American Germans

After ending what was a spell-binding read for me I want to thank Fred Kempe for writing this wonderful book. It will hit the core of anybody who lives in a context that connects the U.S. and Germany.For the most part, the style of the book is very conversational and very enjoyable to read: "a spellbinding journey".Two threads are brilliantly interwoven.There are the author's travels through the re-united Germany (and Bosnia) of the late 90's and his experiences and interchanges with Germans from all parts of society. This is the part of the book that is optimistic, sometimes humerous but never less than deeply analytical and consisely accurate.Then there is the personal quest of Fred Kempe, the reluctant German-American. Denying his German roots for a large part of life, he leads us through his developing interest in his famliy history and finally the very personal confrontation with Germany's horrible past in the context of the author's family. This is a very dark chapter of the book and, appropriately, a haunting read. There is the comparison of the U.S.-German relationship to that of an older and younger brother. In that sense being Fred Kempe's younger brother (born 1955 in Germany and living in the U.S. since 1989), I must say that I like the parts best which describe and characterize post cold-war Germany and the younger generation. The historic perspective is very necessary to understand the 90's but it this "modern" half of the book that makes it unique. It is here where I find myself and my friends back in Germany quoted literally through words and views of people who talked to Fred Kempe. And it is this part of the book that I hope will help the U.S.-German relationship beyond the 1990's.
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