
Eva's Cousin
Author: Sibylle Knauss, Anthea Bell
Narrator: Kim Edwards-Fukei
Unabridged: 12 hr 17 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 07/15/2008
Categories: Fiction, Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction

Author: Sibylle Knauss, Anthea Bell
Narrator: Kim Edwards-Fukei
Unabridged: 12 hr 17 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 07/15/2008
Categories: Fiction, Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction
Sibylle Knauss is the author of eight novels. She is professor of dramaturgy and scriptwriting at the Baden-Württemberg Academy of Film. She lives near Stuttgart in Germany.
Anthea Bell is the recipient of the Schlegel Tieck Prize for translation from German, the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize, the Helen and Kurt Wolff Prize in 2002 for the translation of W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz, and the 2003 Austrian State Prize for Literary Translation.
Kim Edwards-Fukei was born in Berlin and grew up in Berlin, London, and Toronto. She holds a degree in Japanese and linguistics from the University of London.
“An intimate portrait of two women at the center of history and how innocence itself can be a crime against humanity. My book of the year.” Linda Grant, Orange Prize–winning author
“The book makes a compelling investigation into the mundanity of evil. Hitler is pathologized, but never diminished, as Marlene and Eva and all the rest tiptoe around him, careful not to upset him…Knauss cleverly counters Marlene’s postadolescent musings with the mythically terrible world she inhabits…These juxtapositions indict Marlene for her very innocence, and make Eva’s Cousin a powerful document of witness.” Amazon.com, editorial review
“Based on interviews with Braun’s real cousin, the novel is a sympathetic portrait of an innocent girl who, while she seems ensconced in the heart of the Nazi empire, is actually a resistance force of one.” Publishers Weekly
“Elegantly told, Knauss’ thought-provoking novel explores Marlene’s conflicted thoughts about her cousin, the war, and the SS officer who becomes her lover. Both passively complicit and helpless, Marlene is nonetheless a character who commands the reader’s sympathy and interest.” Booklist