Tuesday, October 1, 2024

A Language Lesson


I have a short story in the fall edition of Cultivating Oaks Press. The edition focuses on the theme of “fortitude,” and my story is entitled “A Language Lesson.” This is how it begins:

As the train arrived at Heidelberg Station, Sam McClure smiled to remember the first time he’d arrived here. In 1906, he’d just turned 16 and was preparing to spend his high school junior year with a family in Germany. He’d traveled by himself across the Atlantic on the H.M.S. Heimat for Hamburg, sent a telegram to Heidelberg to alert them of his arrival, and taken the train to his sponsoring family. His textbook-fluent German had been more than useful from the time he boarded the German liner in New York Harbor.

 

The Mittelstein family had been waiting: Dr. Aaron Mittelstein, chemistry professor at the university; his wife Ada; and their three children, Wolfgang, 18, Paul, 16, and Annaliese, 13. Wolfie was preparing to leave for university in Berlin. Paul, known as Mitti for being the middle child, was almost exactly Sam’s age and would share the same classes in Gymnasium, the German school he would attend. Annaliese would be attending Gymnasium with them.

 

Sam hadn’t known then what the Mittelsteins thought, but for him it had been love at first sight. That love, and what would become his deep friendship with Mitti, sustained him through a huge bout of homesickness and a steep cultural learning curve. He’d come to love this family so deeply that he returned four years later and stayed with them for a year abroad at the university.

 

To continue reading, please see my post at Cultivating Oaks Press. You can read all of the contributions here.


Photograph: Ransacking a Jewish home during Kristallnacht 1938.


Some Wednesday Readings

 

The red star returns – Gary Saul Morson at The New Criterion on the specter of communism.

 

The death of conservatism? – Henry George at The Critic Magazine.

 

Slange Var! – Samuel Schaefer at Front Porch Republic on toasts.

 

Fine dining, POW Style: Johnson’s Island Rat Club – Kevin Donovan at Emerging Civil War.

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