The Passenger: A Novel

The Passenger: A Novel

by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, André Aciman

Narrated by Neil Hellegers

Unabridged — 6 hours, 51 minutes

The Passenger: A Novel

The Passenger: A Novel

by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, André Aciman

Narrated by Neil Hellegers

Unabridged — 6 hours, 51 minutes

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Overview

"With penetrating urgency and an innate feel for the author's tragicomic yet hyperrealistic interior dialogue, narrator Neil Hellegers gives heartrending voice to this rediscovered novel...Hellegers's superb naturalistic reading accentuates the complicated feelings of trying to stay human in a world gone mad." -- AudioFile Magazine, Earphones Award winner

Hailed as a remarkable literary discovery, a lost novel of heart-stopping intensity and harrowing absurdity about flight and persecution in 1930s Germany

Berlin, November 1938. Jewish shops have been ransacked and looted, synagogues destroyed. As storm troopers pound on his door, Otto Silbermann, a respected businessman who fought for Germany in the Great War, is forced to sneak out the back of his own home. Turned away from establishments he had long patronized, and fearful of being exposed as a Jew despite his Aryan looks, he boards a train.

And then another. And another . . . until his flight becomes a frantic odyssey across Germany, as he searches first for information, then for help, and finally for escape. His travels bring him face-to-face with waiters and conductors, officials and fellow outcasts, seductive women and vicious thieves, a few of whom disapprove of the regime while the rest embrace it wholeheartedly.

Clinging to his existence as it was just days before, Silbermann refuses to believe what is happening even as he is beset by opportunists, betrayed by associates, and bereft of family, friends, and fortune. As his world collapses around him, he is forced to concede that his nightmare is all too real.

Twenty-three-year-old Ulrich Boschwitz wrote The Passenger at breakneck speed in 1938, fresh in the wake of the Kristallnacht pogroms, and his prose flies at the same pace. Taut, immediate, infused with acerbic Kafkaesque humor, The Passenger is an indelible portrait of a man and a society careening out of control.

A Macmillan Audio production from Metropolitan Books


Editorial Reviews

JULY 2021 - AudioFile

With penetrating urgency and an innate feel for the author’s tragicomic yet hyperrealistic interior dialogue, narrator Neil Hellegers gives heartrending voice to this rediscovered novel, written in 1938 in the wake of Kristallnacht. Otto Silbermann, who is desperate to avoid the Third Reich’s roundup of German Jews, searches for a train to take him across the border to safety on the eve of WWII. The 23-year-old Boschwitz deftly captures the spinning emotions and confusion of a man, and an entire culture, that is forced to sell their businesses, lose their friends, and abandon their families to stay one step ahead of genocide. Hellegers’s superb naturalistic reading accentuates the complicated feelings of trying to stay human in a world gone mad. Essential listening. B.P. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

02/08/2021

A German Jew evades arrest by traveling on a series of trains in this uncanny 1938 novel from Boschwitz (1915–1941), his first to be published in English. WWI veteran Otto Silbermann slips out the back door of his Berlin house when Nazis show up to arrest him in 1938. He seeks out his Aryan business partner, Becker, in Hamburg, to recover a debt, and Becker unleashes an anti-Semitic screed before paying up. Otto uses the money to aimlessly ride the rails (“I am safe, he thought, I am in motion. And on top of that I feel practically cozy”). He eventually tries to sneak into Belgium, only to be returned to Germany by soldiers who reject his attempted bribes. He avoids Jewish acquaintances and pesters his son in Paris to figure out how to get him to France, but when the briefcase containing the money goes missing, Otto loses all hope of escape. His bleak reflections on his endless journey (“I’m a prisoner. For a Jew the entire Reich is one big concentration camp”) are contextualized by scathing observations of Aryan Germans, who sometimes offer mild sympathy but ultimately seem to find the concentration camps “rather novel and quaint.” This chilling time capsule offers a startling image of fascism taken hold. (Apr.)

From the Publisher

"Uncannily prescient . . . The Passenger plunges the reader into the gloom of Nazi Germany as the darkness was descending. It deserved to be read when it was written. It certainly deserves to be read now."
The Guardian

"A jewel of a rediscovery . . . superbly translated by Philip Boehm . . . The Passenger is a riveting, noirish, intensely filmic portrait of an ambivalent fugitive, cornered but not captured, safest when in motion, at greatest risk when forced to rest."
Wall Street Journal

"The Passenger reads as though a painting by the German anti-Nazi artist George Grosz has been turned into words, the text almost vibrating with fury at the lies, theft, murder and betrayal. It is also a highly accomplished work, filled with vivid characterisation, sharp dialogue and intensely observed scenes . . . This English edition, skillfully translated by Philip Boehm, is a fitting memorial to a writer of great insight and talent—and an important historical work that vividly recreates the terror experienced by Jews in 1930s Germany."
Financial Times

"Stunning . . . clairvoyant . . . Boschwitz’s novel pulsates with fine, understated descriptions . . . One comes away marveling not only at Boschwitz’s craftsmanship but at what can only be called his human spirit . . . The Passenger resembles a message in a bottle: cautionary, despairing, a literary warning."
—Ruth Margalit, The New York Review of Books

"Powerful . . . A prophetic and chilling portrait of the terror of life under the Nazi regime . . . compared to masterpieces by Franz Kafka and Hans Fallada."
The Telegraph

"A major lit­er­ary event . . . Boschwitz’s own sto­ry and dev­as­tat­ing nov­el are uncan­ny prophe­cies of our own time marked by the degra­da­tion of human­i­ty in flight, search­ing for a place to call home."
—Jewish Book Council

"A global sensation . . . a literary time capsule . . . Written in 1938, The Passenger arrives now as a remedy for the historical amnesia that encourages repeated misfortune."
Forward

"The Passenger is so viscerally absorbing that as I turned each page I shuddered, as if from the same chill breeze felt by the novel’s main character . . . in his desperate attempt to flee Germany. Indeed, the gem-like precision of Boschwitz’s writing evokes, as few other books have, the anxiety and terror . . . in the Third Reich. . . An unnerving, no-holds-barred account of the Nazi regime’s escalating war against the Jews."
Mosaic

"Vibrating with rage at the murder and betrayal of German Jewry . . . this is an enthralling, disturbing but also nuanced story that takes the reader into the heart of the Third Reich’s terror state."
Financial Times

"With The Passenger alone, Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz claims a place alongside the likes of Thomas Mann, Heinrich Böll and Hans Fallada as one of 20th century Germany’s greatest novelists."
New European

"Thriller-tense . . . Like Hans Fallada’s Alone in Berlin, The Passenger is a rediscovered book, and not only shares its menacing claustrophobia but more than matches it for potency and profundity."
New Statesman

"Boschwitz is remarkable not only for his prescience . . . but also for his rare insight and minutely observed depictions of characters from every strata of German society. Witty at the same time that it's tragic, surreal even in its hyper-reality, The Passenger is . . . a masterpiece."
Kirkus Reviews (starred)

"Uncanny . . . This chilling time capsule offers a startling image of fascism taken hold."
Publishers Weekly

"Boschwitz's tale trembles with tension and eerily anticipates the central role the German train system would later play in the horrific logistics of the Holocaust. In a new translation, this remains a potent and uniquely rendered work of witness."
Booklist

"Vivid and disquieting . . . Boschwitz relates this fight for self-preservation—not just of life, but of identity—in harrowing psychological detail . . . An arresting glimpse at a pivotal moment in history."
Shelf Awareness

"This brilliant rediscovered thriller is up there with the best Second World War novels. The existential crisis that overtook Jews in Nazi Germany is rivetingly caught."
The Times (London)

"A remarkable rediscovery from a long-forgotten author. For all the novel's literary deftness, it remains raw with the shock of finding that Germany is no longer home but a place of brutality and exclusion. A powerful record of Berlin's dark past, it is also an insight into the tragic condition of anyone who no longer feels safe in their own country, who cannot trust the majority, who senses the laws and social mores of an intolerant nation bending against them."
Exberliner

"In the individual sorrow and desperation of a Jew travelling in a walled space of psychedelic horrors, Boschwitz, himself a tragic passenger, saw the larger story of the abandoned . . . The Passenger shows, as all great novels born of the pathologies of hate do, how art alone can redeem history."
OPEN Magazine

"Eerily prescient . . . It is hard to imagine a more tragic end for an author who wrote with such adroit understanding about the mundane madness that lies behind genocidal cruelty and arbitrary classifications."
Rain Taxi

"What a find this is, a novel that lay buried and forgotten for 80 years. It's part John Buchan, part Franz Kafka and completely gripping."
—Jonathan Freedland, Guardian journalist

"Powerful . . . extraordinary . . . The Passenger truly captures the sense of inner disintegration that happens when your civic and human rights have been stripped away and you become this other being, even to yourself."
—Lisa Appignanesi, author of Everyday Madness

"The Passenger, a newly recovered classic of the end of Jewish Europe, dramatizes the route to hell with indignant clarity, passion, intelligence, and rueful goddamned humor."
—Joshua Cohen, author of Book of Numbers

"I didn't want The Passenger to end—and not only because I was swept up in its restless, hypnotic style. This story of a Jewish man on the run has a Scheherazade-like quality: if he can stay in motion, perhaps the fate we know awaits him will somehow be deferred. A haunting and unsettling novel."
—Ruth Franklin, author of Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life

"Prophetic and flawlessly penetrating . . . Boschwitz’s tale of an individual scurrying from train station to train station across a homeland that is no longer home could not have been more prescient of the terror the Nazis would unleash . . . What Boschwitz saw clearly was the utter despoliation of one’s identity, of one’s trust in the world, and ultimately of one’s very humanity."
—from the Preface by André Aciman

"The Passenger is a miracle."
Süddeutsche Zeitung, Germany

"A chronicle of dehumanization with the pace of a thriller, evoking Kafka’s The Trial or Imre Kertész’s books."
El País, Spain

"A literary sensation.”
Haaretz, Israel

"A missing piece rediscovered, to stand next to Elie Wiesel."
Gazzetta del Sud, Italy

"A rare novel of daily life in the early hours of catastrophe. This masterpiece is the work of a 23-year-old author."
Marianne, France

"If you have to choose one book of twentieth-century history, read The Passenger. A truly exceptional novel."
Mažvydas Karalius Review, Lithuania

"Important and gripping."
Dagens Nyheter, Sweden

"If you have to choose one book of twentieth-century history, read The Passenger. A truly exceptional novel."
Mažvydas Karalius Review, Lithuania

"A tragicomic fable of the human condition and a comedy of morals and characters of exceptional psychological acuity, The Passenger evokes the worlds of Kafka and Charlie Chaplin." —Le Figaro, France

"A masterpiece." —L’Avvenire, Italy

"An incredibly gripping rediscovery." —SRF Literaturclub, Germany

JULY 2021 - AudioFile

With penetrating urgency and an innate feel for the author’s tragicomic yet hyperrealistic interior dialogue, narrator Neil Hellegers gives heartrending voice to this rediscovered novel, written in 1938 in the wake of Kristallnacht. Otto Silbermann, who is desperate to avoid the Third Reich’s roundup of German Jews, searches for a train to take him across the border to safety on the eve of WWII. The 23-year-old Boschwitz deftly captures the spinning emotions and confusion of a man, and an entire culture, that is forced to sell their businesses, lose their friends, and abandon their families to stay one step ahead of genocide. Hellegers’s superb naturalistic reading accentuates the complicated feelings of trying to stay human in a world gone mad. Essential listening. B.P. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2021-05-05
A newly rediscovered masterpiece set in the days following Kristallnacht.

When pounding erupts at the front door of his Berlin apartment with voices crying out for his arrest, Otto Silbermann escapes out the back. It’s Kristallnacht, 1938, and Silbermann, a wealthy, respectable, and—crucially—Jewish businessman doesn’t know where to go. He takes a train, and then another. He goes from Berlin to Hamburg and then back to Berlin. He goes to Aachen and Dresden and Berlin once again. Days pass, and Silbermann is still on a train. His name is recognizably Jewish, so he avoids using it—no hotels for Silbermann, with their registration forms—but his face is not, and his bearing is so upright and respectable he doesn’t seem particularly suspect. Still, he’s in constant danger of arrest. In its dark absurdity, Boschwitz’s brilliant novel recalls Kafka, particularly The Trial, in which threat looms like an edifice—and yet, reading, you’re also struck by a panicked, choking laughter. And like Tolstoy’s Ivan Ilyich, Silbermann thinks that by clinging to the last vestiges of middle-class life, he can avoid or outpace death. “Am I traveling?” Silbermann wonders. “No! I’m stuck in the same place, like a person who takes refuge in a cinema where he sits in his seat without moving as the films flicker away—and all the while his worries are lurking just outside the exit.” Then, too, the story behind the novel’s publication is almost as intriguing as the novel itself. Boschwitz, who was half Jewish, was only 23 when he wrote the book; he died in 1942 on a transport ship traveling from Australia to England under German bombardment. The novel briefly appeared in Britain and the United States but never in the German original. In 2015, it was rediscovered by chance. Boschwitz is remarkable not only for his prescience—the novel might be one of the very earliest depictions of the aftermath of Kristallnacht—but also for his rare insight and minutely observed depictions of characters from every strata of German society.

Witty at the same time that it's tragic, surreal even in its hyper-reality, Boschwitz’s novel is a remarkable achievement.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177108391
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 04/13/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
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