The Other Hoffmann Sister, Ben Fergusson
The Other Hoffmann Sister, Ben Fergusson
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The Other Hoffmann Sister

Author: Ben Fergusson

Narrator: Suzannah Hampton

Unabridged: 12 hr 33 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/04/2017


Synopsis

Shortlisted for The Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year 2015, Ben Fergusson's critically acclaimed debut, The Spring of Kasper Meier, was the winner of the Betty Trask Prize 2015 and the HWA 2015 Debut Crown Award. The Other Hoffmann Sister is a gripping, evocative read about two sisters set in pre-WW1 Germany which will appeal to fans of The Essex Serpent by Sarah Perry.

For Ingrid Hoffmann the story of her sister's disappearance began in their first weeks in Southwest Africa...

Ingrid Hoffmann has always felt responsible for her sister Margarete and when their family moves to German Southwest Africa in 1902, her anxieties only increase. The casual racism that pervades the German community, the strange relationship between her parents and Baron von Ketz, from whom they bought their land, and the tension with the local tribes all culminate in tragedy when Baron von Ketz is savagely murdered. Baroness von Ketz and their son, Emil, flee with the Hoffmanns as the Baron's attackers burn down the family's farm.

Both families return to Berlin and Ingrid's concerns about Margarete are assuaged when she and Emil von Ketz become engaged on the eve of the First World War. But Margarete disappears on her wedding night at the von Ketz's country house. The mystery of what happened to her sister haunts Ingrid, but as Europe descends into chaos, her hope of discovering the truth becomes ever more distant.

After the war, in the midst of the revolution that brings down the Kaiser and wipes out the aristocracy that her family married into, Ingrid returns to the von Ketzes' crumbling estate determined to find out what really happened to her sister.

About Ben Fergusson

Ben Fergusson's debut novel, The Spring of Kasper Meier, was awarded the Betty Trask Prize and the HWA Debut Crown, and was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award. The Other Hoffmann Sister and An Honest Man complete a trilogy of novels set in the same apartment block in Berlin at key moments in the city's twentieth-century history. His short fiction has been published in journals internationally and in 2020 he won the Seán O'Faoláin International Short Story Prize. He also translates from German, winning a 2020 Stephen Spender Prize for poetry in translation. Ben lives in Berlin with his husband and son.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Helen on December 24, 2017

This book felt like a real struggle. I usually enjoy slow, atmospheric stories that focus on character, rather than plot, developments, but this book is the literal definition of slow, and if I hadn’t been sent the book to review I would have given up by page 60. The setting is the early twentieth c......more

Goodreads review by Mandy on June 10, 2017

Although I enjoyed reading this on the whole, it didn’t quite hang together for me, and I didn’t relate to the characters. The story is original and absorbing enough, telling as it does of the Hoffman sisters, Ingrid and Margarete, whom we first meet in German South West Africa in 1902, where the fa......more

Goodreads review by Fiona on September 29, 2017

Thank you to Netgalley and the publishers for their advance copy in return for an honest review. Ingrid Hoffmann's sister disappears on her wedding night and Ingrid is left bewildered by her sisters sudden disappearance. Ingrid's story is set against a background from the tribal uprisings in German......more

Goodreads review by Girl with her Head in a Book on May 22, 2017

From the very beginning, we are told that the 'other' Hoffmann sister will disappear. Ingrid is the sturdy one, the sensible one, the one who pays attention to her studies. Her elder sibling Margarete is far more sensitive. For Ingrid, the seeds for Margarete's disappearance were sown when the famil......more

Goodreads review by Emi on June 12, 2019

Hedwig and Johannes Hoffmann will stop at nothing to raise their station in life, from humble beginnings to aristocracy and at risk of losing all their striving is even for - their daughters Ingrid and Margarete. Against a backdrop of violent German history in Southwest Africa and revolutionary Berl......more


Quotes

A fascinating look at racism and snobbery. Broken postwar Germany is superbly drawn and events in Africa are horrific The Times

Shortlisted for the Sunday Times/Peters Fraser & Dunlop Young Writer of the Year Award in 2015, Ben Fergusson was much praised for his first novel, The Spring of Kasper Meier...The Other Hoffmann Sister confirms the talent for atmospheric, morally complex historical fiction that Fergusson showed in his first novel...An engrossing exploration of the ways that secrecy, racism and snobbery take their toll on its finely realised characters' Sunday Times

In this intricately plotted novel, Ben Fergusson takes a little-known slice of history and fashions it into a gripping love story Mail on Sunday

The evocative setting and the quick-paced plot takes the reader on a whirlwind tour through South Africa, to Berlin and back again, through war and its aftermath, through aristocracy and the von Ketz's crumbling estate. The novel, written by the award-winning author Ben Fergusson, would appeal to fans of Sarah Perry's The Essex Serpent. 10 Best Book Club Reads, independent.co.uk

[An] atmospheric, morally complex historical novel Sunday Times Culture 'Must Read'

Taut, subtle, ambitious and engrossing. A gripping story of conflicting loyalties spanning a turbulent and changing world Imogen Robertson, author of The Paris Winter

A beautiful, compelling read with exquisitely drawn characters. Wonderful Jason Hewitt, author of Devastation Road

Elegantly crafted and engrossing - Fergusson's The Other Hoffmann Sister is excellent William Ryan, author of The Constant Soldier

Beguiling, unsettling, and wonderfully atmospheric. A dark expedition across a nightmarish landscape of physical and emotional damage and moral decay Sarah Waters, praise for The Spring of Kasper Meier

A richly accomplished work with a fascinating central character. And like the best historical novelists, Fergusson combines the ability both to bring the past to life with grippingly immediate vignettes, and use it to illustrate themes such as betrayal, prejudice and the deceptive nature of memory, which remain universal i