Nesthäkchen’s First School Year | |
Title Orig: | Nesthäkchens Erstes Schuljahr |
Translator: | Steven Lehrer |
Author: | Else Ury |
Illustrator: | Franz Kuderna |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Series: | Nesthäkchen, volume 2 |
Genre: | Fiction/Adventure |
Publisher: | SF Tafel |
Release Date: | 2016 |
Media Type: | Print (trade paper) |
Pages: | 244 pp (trade paper edition) |
Isbn: | 1500686204 |
Preceded By: | Nesthäkchen and Her Dolls |
Followed By: | Nesthäkchen in the Children's Sanitorium |
Nesthäkchen's First School Year is the second book in the Nesthäkchen series, written by Else Ury. Nesthäkchen is a Berlin doctor's daughter, Anne Marie Braun, a slim, golden blond, quintessential German girl. The series follows Annemarie from infancy (Nesthäkchen and Her Dolls) to old age and grandchildren (Nesthäkchen with White Hair).[1]
Nesthäkchen's First School Year, published in Berlin 1915 by Meidingers Jugendschriften Verlag, describes Annemarie's first school year.[2] [3]
The book describes Anne Marie's school day in the German Empire. Her class has fifty pupils, taught by an attractive, sympathetic woman named Miss Hering. Anne Marie becomes friends with the neighbor's daughter, Margot Thielen, and two cousins, Marlene Ulrich and Ilse Hermann. Also Anne Marie is attracted to the naughty Hilde Rabe.
In class a hierarchy is introduced. The best students are in front, the bad ones sit in back. Anne Marie is a good student, but she does not remain long in first place. Not only her performance but also her behavior and orderliness are graded. She is soon surpassed by her friend Margot Thielen, who is less talented but a good child.
In the editions of the book prior to the 1980s, Anne Marie's mother explains to her daughter that orderliness and behavior are more important than good grades for a girl.[4] However, Anne Marie persists in her untidiness until she forgets one day to give her canary Mätzchen (Antics) fresh water. The bird dies, and Anne Marie realizes for the first time that sloppiness can have dire consequences. She gets a new bird for Christmas, whom she believes is her old bird born again. She becomes - at least until the end of the book - an orderly child and is permitted to give a children's party as a reward. Anne Marie learns the difficult art of knitting from her grandmother.
During the summer holidays she travels with her parents to Johannesbad (Janské Lázně) in the Riesengebirge (the venue of the holiday was not changed after 1945).
"A young family favorite charms her teacher in this affecting novel from a century ago. Readers should be transported not only to an earlier era’s childhood world, but to a glowingly idealized version of that realm, and they will likely be as enchanted by Annemarie as were Ury’s original readers." Kirkus Reviews [5]