A prophetic 1933 novel has found a surprising second life – it holds lessons for us all by Charlotte Higgins (The Guardian) is an interesting take on the vagaries of literary success.
A few days ago I asked an American acquaintance – as one does these days – where he sees “it”, by which I meant the political situation, heading. He took a breath. “In my opinion, the US is in a very similar position to Germany in 1933-4,” he said. “And we have to ask, could 1936, 1937, 1938 have been avoided? That’s the point we are at. You can try to say fascism couldn’t happen in the US. But I think the jury’s out.”
His words seemed especially resonant to me because I had just finished reading a remarkable novel precisely to do with Germany in 1933-4, a book written in the former year and published in the latter. Forgotten for decades, Sally Carson’s Bavaria-set Crooked Cross was republished in April by Persephone Books, which specialises in reviving neglected works. Since then, it has been a surprise hit, a word-of-mouth jaw-dropper, passed from hand to hand.
The novel seems to have been well-written without having great success in its time, and the author dying young probably did not help keep it in print.
Carson wrote two sequels to Crooked Cross. The entire trilogy was published by 1938. Then, in 1941, not yet 40, she died of cancer. Nicola Beauman, the founder of Persephone Books, happened upon mention of Carson’s work some years ago, in an academic book on female writers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Crooked Cross was well reviewed in 1934, but made no great waves and soon sank without trace (though the Manchester Guardian’s founding women’s page editor, the great journalist Madeline Linford, chose it as a book of the year). My personal theory is that it was ahead of the curve, sounding its alarms about the direction Germany was going in before a British public was ready to hear it. It took some detective work by Persephone Books to discover who Carson actually was: born in Surrey in 1902 and raised by her widowed mother in Dorset, she worked as a publisher’s reader. She spent many holidays with friends in Bavaria, hence her deep knowledge of the region.
One of the remarkable things about this book is its immediacy. It was written in the moment, and published quickly. The six-month period that it covers was one of momentous political change: Hitler became chancellor, the Nazis gained an effective majority in the Reichstag, Dachau was opened, and Jews were barred from public-service jobs. At the start of the novel, the characters greet each other with a cheery Grüss Gott; by the end, Herr Kluger is heil Hitler-ing acquaintances in the street and the local church bells have been altered so that they chime with the notes of the Nazi anthem, the Horst Wessel song. Also by the end of this short six months, the loving, close circle of the Kluger family has fallen apart. The attentive reader will have noted, even within the first few pages, for example, that Lexa’s fiance Moritz Weissman, a good Roman Catholic emerging from Christmas mass, also happens to have a Jewish surname.
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Crooked Cross gets no closer to Hitler than that photograph on the piano. All the politics happen at a distance, in the background, and are understood only as their effects filter down to the Klugers and their little town. In fact in some ways it is a conventional middlebrow, domestic novel, somewhat earnest in tone. For me, earnestness is part of its virtue: it does not make the mistake of thinking nazism laughable, as British people often tended to do. Its focus on deeply ordinary people also makes it miles more insightful on nazism, its spread and its appeal, than Flanner’s Hitler profile. The Kluger family, like millions of families across Germany, is deeply marked by the great war, and shaped by economic collapse. The boys have never found meaningful work. Helmy is unemployed, and Erich has an unsatisfying job as a ski instructor.
From a forgotten novel to Off-Broadway, interesting: Ty Fanning Will Join Mint Theater's Crooked Cross Off-Broadway (Playbill).
sch 10/18































