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Crooked Cross

by Sally Carson
Persephone book no:

151 152


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The Far Cry
A Well Full of Leaves
Regular price £15.00
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380pp
ISBN 9781910263426
PREFACE BY LAURA FREEMAN

Crooked Cross describes, through the eyes of one ordinary family, the Nazis’ growth in power between December 1932 and August 1933. It is extraordinarily prescient, anticipating all the horrors they were about to inflict on the world, and in this respect it joins a small group of novels, PB no. 39 Manja and PB no. 136 The Oppermanns among them, which were written to try to alert the world to what was happening.

The main focus of the novel is on disaffected German youth: it shows with great subtlety that by the early 1930s there was huge unemployment, and a corresponding feeling of futility, and that what the Nazis did so skilfully was to provide a sense of purpose. Crooked Cross is the best account we've read of why some young men who feel disaffected, lost or ignored turn towards authoritarian governments.

"‘Do you want another war, Helmy?’ asked Frau Kluger quietly, keeping her eyes on the bread she was cutting.

‘I don’t know,’ he answered miserably. ‘I don’t know what I want. I want something – we all want something – we all want to be somebody, want to have something – make something.’

‘You mean you all want to break something,’ broke in Lexa sharply. ‘And when you’ve broken everything you can touch – what d’you think you’ll do then?’"

The heroine of the novel, Lexa, watches her brothers being seduced by National Socialism, as she observes her Catholic fiancé losing his job because he has a Jewish name and, by the summer of ’33, is deprived of basic human rights like sitting on a park bench. But despite the grimness of all this, the novel remains intensely readable as it implicitly asks the question: how could the country of Beethoven and Goethe, Freud and the Bauhaus, be descending into barbarism? Why would the rest of the world not intervene before it was too late? 

When Crooked Cross was published in 1934 the Daily Mirror thought it ‘gripping and moving’, the Observer called it ‘a very good novel’, the Times Literary Supplement congratulated Sally Carson on ‘the delicacy of the love story which she has placed in this grim setting’ and the Coventry Herald thought it ‘a book everyone should read – and remember’. A year later it was turned into a West End play and then she wrote two sequels, The Prisoner (1936) and A Traveller Came By (1938). But with the outbreak of war, and Sally Carson’s death in 1941, her work was forgotten – until now. 

Endpapers

The endpapers for Crooked Cross are taken from a curtain material – machine cord embroidery on a linen background – that's just the sort of thing Frau Kluger might have had hanging in her kitchen. It was manufactured in Germany in 1930 and sold at the Hohenzollern-Kunstgewerbehaus Friedmann & Weber GmbH in Berlin (which was forced to close in 1936) © Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz/May Voigt. 

Picture Caption

'Members of the Hitler Youth' march through Berlin, 1933 © Mary Evans / Sueddeutsche Zeitung.


Read What Readers Say

Rachel Joyce (author of 'The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry')

'Crooked Cross' is an electrifying masterpiece. It is also my favourite kind of book – unputdownable, beautifully intricate, ambitious and unsentimental. Like the very best, it stays with you long after the last page, and leaves you with the feeling that a door has been opened that you had only dimly seen before. It’s a brilliant account of a young woman’s political and emotional awakening in Nazi Germany - the realisation that it it is no longer acceptable or possible for her to exist apart from the society and belief system in which she lives. That she must either subscribe to it or fight it. But also, within the bigger context of her family and friends, it’s brilliant (and somehow even forgiving) of how different people - both men and women - became seduced by the Nazi movement, answered by it, in fact, and give up the code of morals which had previously held them. I won’t forget it.

The Times

Sally Carson’s prescient novel offers an unflinching look at the early days of Nazism, resonating with today’s fears of lost boys, strong men and old hatreds... A remarkable novel: chilling, compelling, contained... a propulsive read....

Joanna Quinn (author of 'The Whalebone Theatre')

This is an astonishing book. It depicts an ordinary Germany family in 1933, revealing how they and their country are sliding towards the horrors of fascism. It's such a compulsive story, it reads like a contemporary novel - but it was written in 1934! It's a rare writer who can look at her present moment and predict its terrible end result, before it has even happened... The central character, Lexa, [is] the power embodiment of the loneliness of moral courage - and this heartrending story carries a warning that feels horribly relevant today... extremely recommended.

Categories: Family History Love Story Men (books about) Overseas Politics Race WWII

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