Nowhere in Africa: An Autobiographical Novel

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University of Wisconsin Pres, 2004 - 291 Seiten
Nowhere in Africa is the extraordinary tale of a Jewish family who flees the Nazi regime in 1938 for a remote farm in Kenya. Abandoning their once-comfortable existence in Germany, Walter Redlich, his wife Jettel, and their five-year-old daughter, Regina, each deal with the harsh realities of their new life in different ways. Attorney Walter is resigned to working the farm as a caretaker; pampered Jettel resists adjustment at every turn; while the shy yet curious Regina immediately embraces the country—learning the local language and customs, and finding a friend in Owuor, the farm's cook. As the war rages on the other side of the world, the family’s relationships with their strange environment become increasingly complicated as Jettel grows more self-assured and Walter more haunted by the life they left behind. In 1946, with the war over, Regina's fondest dream comes true when her brother Max is born. Walter's decision, however, to return to his homeland to help rebuild a new Germany puts his family into turmoil again.

Visit the Web site for the film at www.nowhereinafrica.com
 

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Autoren-Profil (2004)

Stefanie Zweig was born on September 19, 1932 in Leobschütz, now part of Poland. In 1938, her family fled the Nazi persecution of Jews and moved to Kenya, where she attended a British school. They returned to Germany in 1947 when her father, a lawyer, was appointed a judge in Frankfurt. She started working for a Frankfurt newspaper, Abendpost Nachtausgabe, in 1959 and was the arts editor and film reviewer from 1963 until it closed in 1988. She wrote children's books in her spare time and began writing novels only after the newspaper closed. Her novels include Nowhere in Africa and Somewhere in Germany. Nowhere in Africa was adapted into a German film with the same title, which won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2003. Zweig co-wrote the screenplay with the director Caroline Link. Zweig died on April 25, 2014 at the age of 81.

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