Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Reliving women’s lives under Hitler

‘Castle’ takes trio through Third Reich

- MIKE FISCHER

Late in Jessica Shattuck’s “The Women in the Castle,” the daughter of a German soldier — who’d once loaded Jews into Treblinka-bound trucks — walks the Bavarian castle grounds where much of this novel unfolds. It’s 1991, but her thoughts travel back a half-century.

“As a German,” she thinks, one “knows that if you start poking through a shoebox of photograph­s, you’ll find Nazi uniforms and swastikas and children with their arms raised in ‘Heil Hitler’ salutes.”

While much of Shattuck’s well-researched novel takes place in the immediate aftermath of World War II, the three surviving women at its center are haunted by the dozen years of the Thousand Year Reich — “a great unknowable continent of experience,” as Shattuck calls it, that both binds them together and threatens to tear them apart.

Marianne, the wealthy daughter of Prussian aristocrat­s who inherits the castle, is married to a man hanged for his role in the 1944 plot to kill Hitler. Principled as a child – when her friends nicknamed her “The Judge” — she remains so as an adult, castigatin­g those Germans who refuse to own up after the war to what they’d done.

But in a book where Shattuck manages to be both morally tough-minded and remarkably empathetic toward all of her characters, even this sometimes strident voice of conscience exhibits blind spots.

Shattuck lets us see what Marianne too readily forgets: Her moral qualms are not just a mark of her often admirable and heroic character, but also a luxury made possible by wealth and status, protecting her during and after the war. As we’ll see, she’s a direct beneficiar­y of that war, in ways that align her with every limousine liberal who decries while still enjoying privilege.

The two poorer women and their children joining Marianne in her castle in the summer of 1945 confront tougher choices.

Benita, the less complicate­d of the two, is a Bavarian peasant whose beauty had led to marriage with the man she initially thinks of as her “prince”: another of the conspirato­rs whose plot to assassinat­e Hitler costs him his life. Marianne treats her like a child; in some ways she is one. But she also endures suffering of a sort Marianne cannot begin to fathom.

Marianne plucks the more inscrutabl­e and reflective Ania and her sons from a displaced person’s camp; the two will become best friends until, suddenly, they’re not — sundered by lies Ania has told in order to survive.

Shattuck is best in the second half of her book, as she turns her gaze on those immediate postwar years when lying in Germany was both survival tactic and way of life.

Whether fishing along a river bank where concentrat­ion camp victims were once shot, making a living as a wedding photograph­er after serving as photo editor for the Nazi newspaper, or spreading a “thin quilt” of “peace and plenty” “over a pile of” manure, the Germans of the late 1940s and early 1950s are portrayed as a country of people denying who they’d been.

Even as “Castle” chronicles the guilt, shame and denial, Shattuck also credibly traces how the descent into madness could have happened, hardening good people one fatal misstep at a time:

“She knew of the horrors and she didn’t,” we’re told of one woman, sketched through Shattuck’s close thirdperso­n narration, shifting among and giving voice to multiple characters. “She knew it the way you know something is happening far away in a distant land, something you have no control over: earthquake refugees living in squalid conditions or victims in a foreign war.”

Shattuck’s effective, cross-cutting temporal shifts — from Kristallna­cht in 1938 to the end of the war in 1945, forward to 1950 and then back to the 1920s and 1930s — underscore­s the ongoing, nightmaris­h yesterday that Germany continued to live, long after the war ended. As one character ruefully learns, one ultimately cannot narrate “away evil while staring it in the face.”

 ??  ?? The Women in the Castle: A Novel. By Jessica Shattuck. William Morrow. 368 pages. $26.99.
The Women in the Castle: A Novel. By Jessica Shattuck. William Morrow. 368 pages. $26.99.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States