An Afterlife
In a small Bavarian town, a displaced persons camp set up by the Allies after World War II sets the scene for the opening of Fran Bartkowski's touching novel, An Afterlife. There, Ruby and Ilya, both survivors of concentration and labor camps, meet at a time of heightened intensity, mate and wait to find out where their lives are about to begin again, either in America or what is then known as Palestine. They have survived the war, but are hardly unscathed. Family and home will need to be created anew. They forge tentative bonds with the German inhabitants of the town, bonds that might favor them in the process of applying for visas, living contained within the boundaries of the camp, guarded, ever-walking on eggshells.
An Afterlife follows Ruby and Ilya to northern New Jersey, where they face a whole new set of challenges, as individuals suffering from post-traumatic stress in a completely foreign culture, and as a young couple who are still coming to know one another.
The novel is told mostly from Ruby's point of view, a character whose vitality and curiosity in the post-war years are her most remarkable features. Long after turning the last of its pages, readers will remember Ruby, with her pain and indomitable hope, and the love she holds for Ilya, a love that may or may not contain within it the seeds of her salvation.
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Become an affiliate"An Afterlife is a totally surprising book, unforgettable in its depiction of the daily lives of holocaust survivors in postwar Germany. Ruby is a seamstress so talented that her sense of color, thread, and fabrics becomes a bridge to friendship with a German shopkeeper who shares her passion and quietly employs her. So many details linger within Bartkowski's skillful telling: the dark bread, the small celebrations, the amazing images of young refugee mothers walking in town with their baby carriages, lover's afternoon walks (back before curfew), are miracles upon miracles. The characters agonize between remembering and forgetting, but An Afterlife moves forward, and like all truly visionary books, re-defines its title. We read An Afterlife with an awareness of present streams of refugees, supported, resisted, misunderstood, and the repetition of old cycles adds to the depth of Bartkowski's novel." -- Jayne Anne Phillips, author of Machine Dreams, Lark and Termite, and Quiet Dell
"Bartkowski delivers a novel that transcends the fiction genre. This work is as detailed and accurate (with brutal and miraculous turns) as the most searing historical documents, folded in a narrative as immediate and vivid as a poetic memoir. The book is written as it must have been lived, with an ear to the ground and an eye to the future. Its power is a testament to the tether and persistence of inherited trauma and its twin: the redemptive possibilities of telling the stories our forebears could not tell. As the title suggests, these characters live another life after the labor and death camps, after the Displaced Persons camps, after emigrating to the U.S.--this other life springs up on every page of this extraordinary novel, in full color, in season after season, in names and births and deaths and letters and twists and fabrics and factories and an unforgettable hope that trembles throughout this beautiful and necessary book." -- Brenda Shaughnessy, author of Our Andromeda
"How do worlds, lives, and loves get recreated in the aftermath of catastrophe? In a work of enveloping empathy and vividly conjured detail, Frances Bartkowski imagines answers to this impossible question. A poignant and utterly persuasive evocation of death and rebirth, spanning years and continents." -- Susan L Carruthers, author of The Good Occupation: American Soldiers and the Hazards of Peace
"Frances Bartkowski's An Afterlife gives us the imagined years of characters arriving on the east coast after a shared life in the displaced persons' camp, opening up questions of surviving, even flourishing in the aftermath of unbearable atrocity and loss. This brilliant story relays the excitement for new life and community even as the ghosts of loss and complicity gather again, threatening to pull these characters back and down into the dark. Each one bears a singular relation to loss and love, and together they struggle to affirm the sound, the smell, the feel of a new world." -- Judith Butler, author of Precarious Life