The Bread of Those Early Years (novel) explained

The Bread of Those Early Years
Author:Heinrich Böll
Title Orig:Das Brot der frühen Jahre
Country:West Germany
Language:German
Publisher:Kiepenheuer & Witsch
Pub Date:1955
English Pub Date:1957

The Bread of Those Early Years (German: Das Brot der frühen Jahre) is a 1955 novella by the West German writer Heinrich Böll. It concerns Walter Fendrich, a young man living alone in a post-war German city (probably based on Cologne), making ends meet as a washing machine repair man. The story takes place on a single March day in 1949 when Walter meets the daughter of a family friend, whom he is supposed to help settle into her student lodgings. So enraptured is he by Hedwig that he sees his whole life anew — the death of his mother, his relationship with his father, postwar privations and his negative experiences as an apprentice. Whether Walter can truly expect his epiphany to be life-transforming, however, is a question that will be in the reader's mind as the story unfolds.[1]

The novella was adapted into a 1962 film with the same title.[2]

German text

English translations

Notes and References

  1. Afterword of Beckett translation (see under English translations).
  2. Web site: Festival de Cannes: The Bread of Those Early Years. festival-cannes.com. . 2011-10-29.