![]() ![]() ![]() Later in life, working as a seamstress, she grows close to Ferdinand, the young son of an employer. She waits uncomplainingly for Herbert’s visits and, even after he leaves her life for good, carries a torch. Her instincts for community and stability run counter to his-she becomes a teacher, forms friendships, joins unions and churches, and creates a comfortable home for herself. ![]() As a soldier in South West Africa during Germany’s genocide against the Herero people, he feels an occasional twitch of empathy: “But they had perished with their cattle and like cattle they had been lying on the ground, and he had been on horseback.” Herbert, obsessed with travel and exploration, is often gone for months or years, but Olga remains faithful to him. Restless and self-centered (and none too bright), Herbert is colonialism on the hoof. When they fall in love, his family disapproves, so they pursue their affair in secret. A bright and curious student, Olga finds solace in school and in her friendship and, later, more with Herbert Schröder, son of the richest man in the village. After her parents’ deaths, she’s raised by her cold German grandmother in a village in Pomerania. In a story that sweeps across a century, a woman who stays home is more engaging that her lover who explores the world.īorn near the end of the 19th century in a small town in Poland, Olga Rinke endures a childhood marked by poverty and loneliness. ![]()
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