Synopses & Reviews
A debut novel that retells the history of twentieth-century Germany through the experiences of three ordinary Germans.
Helmut: A boy born with a physical deformity finds work as a photographers assistant during the 1930s and captures on film the changing temper of Berlin, the city he loves. But his acute photographic eye never provides him with the power to understand the significance of what he sees through his camera. . . . Lore: In the weeks following Germanys surrender, a teenage girl whose parents are both in Allied captivity takes her younger siblings on a terrifying, illegal journey through the four zones of occupation in search of her grandmother. . . . Micha: Many years after the war, a young man trying to discover why the Russians imprisoned his grandfather for nine years after the war meets resistance at every turn; the only person who agrees, reluctantly, to help him is compromised by his own past.
The Dark Room evokes the experiences of the individual with astonishing emotional depth and psychological authenticity. With dazzling originality and to profound effect, Rachel Seiffert has re-envisioned and illuminated signal moments of the twentieth century in all their drama and complexity.
About the Author
Rachel Seiffert was born in England in 1971 and now lives in
Germany
From the Hardcover edition.
Reading Group Guide
1. What does Seiffert imply about the relationship of the individual to the atrocities? Do Helmut, Lore and Michas responses to their situations differ according to their proximity to the events?
2. ‘I am a camera. I see the world from one particular standpoint, and my interpretation of events is based on that view. To what extent can this metaphor be used to describe the novel?
3. The Dark Room has been described by The Guardian as ‘cold and devoid of emotional involvement. Do you agree? Do the three-part structure and the prose style of the novel add or detract from the emotional pull of the story?
4. "The novel ends on a note of optimism. The truth has been confronted and, with the birth of a child, Seiffert holds out the hope that the shadows of the past may be about to lift" (Sunday Telegraph). Do you see this book as a redemptive novel?
5. How does Seifferts investigation of the most difficult moral issues of the past century -- the legacy of atrocity -- challenge our prejudices and preconceptions about the Nazi era?
6. Each of us is an individual; each of us has individual responsibility for our own actions. Each of us is also a member of a family, of families; each of us is a citizen of a state, a member of a nation. Can we, must we, take responsibility for them, for their actions too?