The night travelers A novel

Armando Lucas Correa, 1959-

Book - 2023

Separated by time but united by sacrifice, four women experience love, loss, war, and hope from the rise of Nazism to the fall of the Berlin Wall as they embark on journeys of self-discovery and find themselves to be living testaments to the power of maternal love.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Atria Books 2023.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Armando Lucas Correa, 1959- (author)
Other Authors
Nick Caistor (translator), Faye (Translator) Williams, Cecilia Molinari
Edition
First Atria Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
x, 354 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 349-354).
ISBN
9781501187988
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In Hitler's Germany, Lilith could be forced to undergo sterilization. Although she is only a girl, as the child of a white mother and a Black father, she has no place in society under the laws of the Third Reich. So her mother, Ally, brings her out at night, where no one can see the clues to her mixed racial heritage, and fights valiantly to show her daughter's intelligence to the commission that will decide her fate. But as the warning signs multiply, Ally decides she must take drastic action to save Lilith by sending her to Cuba with their Jewish neighbors. This launches a multigenerational saga that explores the legacy of war and revolution. Once grown, Lilith must face her own terrible choice as revolution engulfs Cuba, and she must decide whether to deliver her daughter, Nadine, to safety in New York. Years later, Nadine returns to Germany to confront the past of her adopted mother and her biological family, as revelations rewrite what she thought she knew. A moving account of the tragic separation of families caught in the vise of history.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Correa (The Daughter's Tale) unfurls a stunning multigenerational story involving WWII Germany and the Cuban Revolution. In 1931 Berlin, poet Ally Keller gives birth to Lilith, her daughter with jazz musician Marcus, a Black German man. After Marcus goes missing, and as Germany marches toward war, Ally fears Lilith may be targeted by the Nazis because of her skin color, so she begs her Jewish neighbors, Beatrice and Albert Herzog, to take seven-year-old Lilith with them to Cuba. As Lilith adapts to life in Cuba with the Herzogs, she befriends Martín Bernal, and they eventually marry. But Martín's alliance with Batista's government puts him in danger when Fidel Castro comes to power, forcing him to leave Lilith and their daughter Nadine alone after he is captured, and Lilith arranges for Nadine to leave Cuba for the U.S., where she's adopted by an American couple. Years later, Nadine attends college in Germany, and while working as a scientist at a research center in Berlin, her interest in her heritage leads her to information about her birth mother's early years. Correa makes palpable the sacrifices made by Ally and Lilith for their children's survival, and the taut pacing keeps the pages flying. Readers will be deeply moved. Agent: Johanna Castillo, Writers House.(Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Four generations of mothers and daughters are affected by desperate wartime choices in Correa's (The Daughter's Tale) ambitious third historical novel. In 1931, as the Nazis gain power in Germany, poet Ally is forced to send her biracial child out of the country to save her from being sterilized or killed. A generation later, Ally's daughter Lilith faces her own terrible dilemma as Fidel Castro's revolution hits Cuba. Nadine, the daughter Ally entrusts to strangers, soon unexpectedly finds herself in the middle of the fight to punish those who collaborated with the Nazi regime and to honor its victims. Later, Nadine's daughter Luna pushes her mother to finally learn the truth about Ally's and Lilith's fates. VERDICT Correa's novel stands out in its attempt to trace the lingering individual and social consequences of wartime trauma in postwar Germany and revolutionary Cuba. It can be hard to keep track of all the characters and their intersecting lives, but this moving, if relentlessly bleak history of one family should appeal to fans of multigenerational stories set against the backdrop of global events.--Mara Bandy Fass

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A bloodline of stubborn, courageous women navigates the horrors of World War II and its rippling aftereffects. "Lilith," Ally Keller murmurs reverently at first sight of her newborn daughter, the product of her brief but intense union with a Black German musician. "Her name means light." And despite the fact that Ally--a freethinking, progressive German writer--must confine Lilith's childhood within the increasingly oppressive, racist strictures of Nazi Germany, where Lilith is considered a mischling (a derogatory term for people of mixed-race ancestry), she proves an unquestionable beacon in Ally's life. A preternaturally intelligent girl who learns the Pythagorean theorem by age 5 and begins studying Shakespeare at 6, Lilith grows up in relative stability, reading Ally's poetry and imbibing the wisdom of Herr Professor (a Jewish literature scholar driven from his university). Lilith and her mother obsessively follow via radio the groundbreaking career of Jesse Owens, whose meteoric rise to greatness symbolizes the freedom that Lilith craves; meanwhile, in Nazi Germany, they're able to venture outside only at night or during the rain, else risking harassment. As the Nuremberg Laws and Kristallnacht incite increasing chaos and S.S. raids worsen, Lilith appears before the German commission for racial purity, which labels her "inferior," risking sterilization by the state. What follows is Ally's immensely painful choice to send Lilith away on a departing ship, accompanied only by the Herzogs, a fleeing Jewish couple who become Lilith's de facto parents. After what Lilith terms her "first death," she must begin an entirely new life in Cuba, constantly aware of the way the past peeks through the cracks of her new reality--and unsure of her mother's fate. In narrative sections that track the lives of Lilith's daughter and other female descendants, the women grapple with the deep scars wrought by World War II along with motherhood, racism, and survivor's guilt; the novel carefully investigates factors that shape identity along with the concept of unresolved memory. Correa's scope here is impressive--the narrative sections span Havana to Berlin and 1931 to 2015--though the breadth sometimes lends the sense of an overstretched narrative, reducing dramatic intensity. Its characters, though, are complex and singular; their interiors are richly drawn and illustrate how history unfolds in increasingly complex ways within individual psyches despite passing time and space. Readers will appreciate the emotional payoff and emerge from the novel with a satisfying sense of catharsis even if it takes a while to achieve. A worthwhile story with some excess material. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One: Berlin, March 1931 1 Berlin, March 1931 The night Lilith was born, winter storms raged in the midst of spring. Windows closed. Curtains drawn. Ally Keller writhed in pain on the damp sheets. The midwife clutched Ally's ankles. "This time it's coming." After the contraction, the very last one, her life would change. Marcus , Ally thought. She wanted to cry out his name. Marcus couldn't answer her. He was far away. The only contact they had now was the occasional letter. Ally had started to forget his scent. Even his face had faded into darkness for a moment. She looked down at herself on the bed as though she were some other woman, as though the body in labor wasn't her own. "Marcus," she said aloud, her mind increasingly restless. After everything they'd been through together, after all they'd said and shared, Marcus had become a shadow to her. Their child would grow up without a father. Perhaps her father had never really wanted her after all. Perhaps this was always meant to be her daughter's destiny. What right did she have to interfere? The night Lilith was born, Ally thought of her own mother. She couldn't recall a single lullaby, an embrace, a kiss. She had spent her childhood surrounded by tutors, perfecting her handwriting and use of language, learning new vocabulary words and proper grammatical constructions. Numbers were a nightmare, science was dull, and geography left her disoriented. All she cared about was escaping into the make-believe stories that led her on journeys back in time. "Join us in the real world, would you?" her mother would say. "Life isn't a fairy tale." Her mother let her go her own way. She had sensed what Ally's life would be, and how powerless she was to stop it. Given the direction Germany was heading, she knew that her rebellious, headstrong daughter was a lost cause. With hindsight, Ally could see her mother had been right all along. "You're falling asleep." The midwife's agitated voice interrupted her thoughts, her hands stained with a yellowish liquid. "You need to concentrate if you want to get this over with." The midwife was seasoned: she could boast of the requisite nine hundred hours of training, had helped deliver more than one hundred babies. "Not a single dead baby, not one. Nor a mother either, not one," she had told Ally when she took her on. "She's one of the best," the agency had assured her. "One day we'll enact a law to make sure that all babies born in our country are delivered by a German midwife," the woman at the agency had added, raising her voice. "Purity upon purity." Perhaps I should have found one with no experience, no idea how to bring a baby into the world, Ally thought. "Look at me!" the midwife snapped. "Unless you do your bit, I can't do my job properly. You're going to make me look bad." Ally began to tremble. The midwife seemed to be in a hurry. Ally thought she might have another pregnant woman waiting for her. She couldn't stop thinking that this woman's fingers, her hands were inside her, delving around. Saving one life while destroying another. The night Lilith was born, Ally tried to imagine herself back in the apartment on the riverbank with Marcus: the two of them, hidden in the moonlight, making plans for life as a family, as if such a thing were possible. The morning light always took them by surprise. Caught unawares, they began closing windows and drawing curtains to stay in the dark they'd made their haven. "We should run away," she once said to Marcus, while they were lying curled up in bed. She waited for his response in silence, knowing that for Marcus there could only be one answer. Nobody could convince him otherwise. "If things are bad for us here, in America it would only be worse," he would say. "Every day that goes by, more people see us as the enemy." To Ally, Marcus's fear was abstract. It lay in hidden forces, like a gathering wave they couldn't see, but that would one day, apparently, drown them all. So she chose to ignore Marcus's forebodings and those of his artist friends; she was hopeful that the storm would pass. Marcus had dreams of working in movies. He had already appeared in one film, in a minor role as a musician, and he had said she should go with him to Paris where he hoped to be cast in another. But then she became pregnant and everything changed. Her parents were beside themselves. They sent her to live in their empty apartment in Mitte, in the center of Berlin, to hide their shame. They told her that it was the last thing they'd do for her. How she chose to live beyond that point was her problem, not theirs. In the letter her mother had written, she could hear her firm, deliberate voice, with its Bavarian lilt. Ally hadn't heard from her since. Ally learned of her father's death from a notice in the newspaper. The same day, she also received a letter about a small inheritance her father had left her. She imagined that back in Munich there would have been prayers, Ave Marias, veiled windows, and stilted conversations that trailed off into murmurs. She thought of her mother shrouded in mourning, a mourning that for her began the day Ally left. Ally was convinced that when her mother died, she would leave instructions for the news of her death not to be made public, to ensure that her death would go unnoticed, so her daughter wouldn't get the chance to weep for her. Ally didn't deserve even that much. Her mother's vengeance would be silence. She recalled the feeling of being alone in the vast Mitte apartment, losing herself in its corridors, its rooms full of shadows and painted a muddy green, which she felt would consume her. It was then that the letters from Marcus began to arrive. This isn't the country I want for my child, don't come back to Düsseldorf, life here grows more difficult by the day. They don't want us in America either. Nobody wants us. Sometimes they were not so much answers to her own letters but diatribes. A cry filled the room. It had come from her chest, her choking throat, her stiffened arms. She felt torn in two. The stabbing pains in her belly spread to her whole body and she clung desperately to the bars of the bed. "Marcus!" Her shout, guttural, startled the midwife. "Who's Marcus? The father? There's nobody here. Come on now, don't stop, you're nearly there. One more push and you've done it!" Her body stiffened and a shiver ran through her. Her lips, trembling, dry. Her belly tensed to a point and then shrank, as though the living being within her had dissolved. She had brought on a storm. She felt the gusts of wind and rain lashing down. Thunderclaps and hailstones pounded her. She was tearing apart. Her abdomen contracted. Opening her increasingly heavy legs, she let something out, a sort of mollusk. A smell of rust invaded the room's fetid air. The tiny body had taken all the warmth of her belly with it. Her skin quivered. A lengthy silence. Ally stretched out her legs and closed her eyes. Tears mingled with sweat. The midwife picked up the inert baby by its feet and snipped through the umbilical cord. With the other hand she tossed the placenta into a dish of bloody water, and on one corner of the bed, began to wash the newborn with tepid water. "It's a girl." The midwife's voice resonated in the room, which was otherwise glaringly silent. What's happened? Why isn't she crying? She's stillborn, she thought. Her throat was still burning; her belly throbbed. She could no longer feel her legs. At that instant, the baby let out a soft whimper like a wounded animal. Little by little, the whimper grew to a howl. Eventually, it became a wail. Ally didn't react. Meanwhile, the midwife began rubbing the baby, more relaxed now that she'd done her job. When she saw the bluish tinge of her clean face, her anxiety returned. A lack of oxygen, she deduced. Tentatively, she opened the baby's mouth and inspected the purple gums. Thinking there might be a blockage in the windpipe, she poked her index finger into the newborn's tiny throat. She looked at the baby, and at Ally, who still had her eyes closed. The little baby wouldn't stop crying as the midwife roughly wrapped her in a clean sheet. Only her face peeped out. The midwife pursed her lips, handing the baby over to Ally the way one transfers a foreign object. "It's a Rhineland bastard. You've brought a mischling into the world. This girl isn't German, she's Black." Ally sat up and took the baby on her lap. The newborn instantly settled. "Lilith," Ally murmured. "Her name means light." Excerpted from The Night Travelers: A Novel by Armando Lucas Correa All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.