Reviews

Run Like Jäger by Karen Bass

marshaskrypuch's review

Go to review page

4.0

This excellent first novel is about a Canadian teen who delves into his German-born grandfather's World War II secrets.

Kurt Schreiber has quizzed his grandfather, also named Kurt Schreiber, about his Nazi past, but his questions have been met with stony silence. Kurt fears that his grandfather may have committed atrocities and this is why he refuses to speak. The teen has recurring nightmares and feels that he must get to the truth for his own peace of mind.

The teen travels to Germany as an exchange student. Kurt chooses to study in Zethen, a town just outside of Berlin, where Kurt senior was born. He is befriended by a local student named Marta and he is bullied and taunted by another named Peter. Townspeople recognize Kurt's name and many remember his grandfather. Peter's bullying includes a taunt that Kurt is a coward just like his grandfather had been.

Marta offers to help Kurt crack the mystery of his grandfather's past, and they go through old newspapers together at the library looking for clues. There is an article about an accident that provides more family names. When he visits the local cemetery in search of more clues, Kurt meets an elderly man who calls him by name. Herr Brandt was a close friend of Kurt's grandfather and the grandson bears an uncanny physical resemblance to his namesake. The teen is intrigued when he realizes that Herr Brandt and his grandfather were in the German army together and fought on the eastern front.

Kurt senior's wartime past unfolds in vivid flashbacks through Herr Brandt's voice. Seamlessly interwoven with this compelling past story is a contemporary one of Kurt's growing affection for Marta, as well as an escalation of Peter's bullying. The past and present stories culminate in a page-turning ending.

Karen Bass writes the day to day experiences of the grandfather as a youth with the kind of gripping detail that comes only from careful research. She shows the gradual progression of how a regular teen could be propagandized into Nazi ideals, first as a member of the compulsory Hitler Youth, and then later as a Wehrmacht soldier. Disillusionment comes when the friends are stationed on the eastern front and witness brutality and kindness from both sides.

The author unflinchingly reveals both Soviet and Nazi horrors. To her credit, Bass does not try to rationalize or explain away the evil that was Nazi Germany, yet she is able to provide much needed context. She shows that there is no such thing as a good person or an evil person, but that all of us are capable of both courage and cowardice within certain circumstances.

Run Like Jäger is a superb novel that will appeal to parents and grandparents as well as teens. It could be used as a launching pad for a conversation that begins with, “What did you do during the war, Grandpa?”

belles_bookshelves's review

Go to review page

4.0

I wasn't completely sure what to expect from this book. It was good, but in a different way. I wasn't captivated by the story, but I think that was mostly because I had a lot going on while I was reading this and the book had a steady pace. It didn't have huge climactic moment (although I guess this is debatable), instead you are given information slowly, not giving away everything at once.

Quick overview: Kurt Shreiber is a Canadian boy who's in Germany for an exchange student program. He shares the name of his grandfather. Peter Neumeyer (a boy bullying Kurt) gives them both another name. Feigling (coward). Kurt doesn't know why anyone would call his grandfather a coward. Seeing as his grandfather never talks about what he did during the war, Kurt starts looking for answers in the town his grandfather grew up in. And he finds them in the form of Herr Brandt, an old man he sees at the cemetery who says he was friends with his grandfather. Reluctantly at first, Herr Brandt starts to tell the story of their childhood growing up in Nazi Germany and what it was exactly that his grandfather did during the war. Through Herr Brandt's stories, Kurt starts getting answers, but then finds that they are not the answers he wanted to hear.

At the beginning I was frustrated at how little information I was getting. It felt too slow, but I think that it's meant to show you how Kurt feels. I was also frustrated at how fast Kurt was to assume that his grandfather was a monster before hearing the whole story. Although it took a while, Kurt starts to see the young man his grandfather really was. I loved the friendship that you see between Jager (Kurt's grandfather) and Wolf (Herr Brandt). The ending was perfect. Kurt was also a sweetheart. Of course this book was written by a women so I'm still suspicious that boys like Kurt and his grandfather either are very rare or don't exsist. My brother sure as heck isn't that thoughtful. Although it starts off slow this is a satisfying read. It isn't one of those blow-out books with a flashy cover and gutsy characters. It's just good story telling.
More...