Sailing Against the Wind explained

Sailing Against the Wind
Title Orig:Vastutuulelaev
Translator:Eric Dickens
Author:Jaan Kross
Country:Estonia
Language:Estonian
Series:Writings from an Unbound Europe [1]
Genre:Historical novel
Publisher:Northwestern University Press[2] (English translation)
Release Date:1984
English Release Date:January 2012
Media Type:Print (Paperback)
Pages:368 pp
Preceded By:Professor Martens' Departure (Estonian: Professor Martensi ärasõit, 1984)
Followed By:The Conspiracy and Other Stories (Estonian: Silmade avamise päev, 1988)

Sailing Against the Wind (Estonian: Vastutuulelaev) is a 1984 Estonian novel about the astronomer Bernhard Schmidt by Jaan Kross. An English translation by Eric Dickens was published in January 2012.

Synopsis

This novel is about the ethnic Estonian Bernhard Schmidt (1879–1935) from the island of Naissaar who loses his right hand in a firework accident during his teenage years. He nevertheless uses his remaining hand to work wonders when polishing high quality lenses and mirrors for astronomical telescopes. Later on, when living in what had become Nazi Germany, he himself invents large stellar telescopes that are still to be found at, for instance, the Mount Palomar Observatory in California and on the island of Mallorca. Schmidt has to wrestle with his conscience when living in Germany as the country is re-arming and telescopes could be put to military use. But because Germany was the leading technical nation at the time, he feels reasonably comfortable there, first in the run-down small town of Mittweida, then at the main Bergedorf Observatory just outside Hamburg. But the rise of the Nazis is literally driving him mad.[3]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.nupress.northwestern.edu/content/writings-unbound-europe
  2. http://www.nupress.northwestern.edu/content/sailing-against-wind
  3. This novel is also available in French, in Jean-Luc Moreau's translation, 1994