Become a Member
Books

Review: The House by the Lake

History reflected in water

October 1, 2015 11:56
Berlin celebrates, in November 2014, the 25th anniversary of the wall's fall

ByOliver Kamm, Oliver Kamm

2 min read

By Thomas Harding
William Heinemann, £20

It would be hard to write an original and moving account of the tortured 20th-century history of Germany. But, in The House by the Lake, Thomas Harding succeeds remarkably. His narrative device is a small, wooden house in a village called Gross Glienicke. Harding tells of the lakeside villa built as a summerhouse by his great-grandfather, Alfred Alexander, after the First World War.

This place of retreat and solitude had to be abandoned by Harding's grandmother in the 1930s when she fled Nazism and settled in England. She and Harding revisited the house in the 1990s, and Harding returned to it a couple of years ago. It was abandoned and derelict.

His book is a combination of oral history and painstaking research into the five families who had occupied the house in the intervening decades. What takes this well out of the mundane in the field of closely observed history on an intimate scale is the fate of the families and the skill with which Harding ties it to Germany's turbulent history. All of the families, in one form or another, were driven out.