Die Blechtrommel
German, Günter Grass, 1993More than 10 items in stock at supplier
Product details
In the early 1950s, a hunchback born in 1924 writes and drums the story of his life and family in a healing and care institution, recounting events from the beginning of the century to Adenauer's Germany. Oskar Matzerath has seen and heard everything; nothing has escaped him, as he was a highly perceptive infant whose mental development was complete at birth. The outsider, who can drum reality and shatter glass with his voice, proves to be the only sane person in a world of illusion, lies, and crime. By the end of his fantastical autobiography, which takes Oskar from pre-war Danzig to post-war Düsseldorf, one discovers that one knows more about Germany and Central Europe—both during the time of genocide and in the Biedermeier of restoration—than ever before. With the publication of "The Tin Drum" in 1959, the German post-war novel connected with world literature, and Oskar the drummer secured his place in modern mythology.