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Jere' M - Josef Jaeger (2009) - Printable Version +- Story-Portal (https://time-tales.af/storys) +-- Forum: EBOOK (https://time-tales.af/storys/forumdisplay.php?fid=27) +--- Forum: EBOOK (https://time-tales.af/storys/forumdisplay.php?fid=28) +--- Thread: Jere' M - Josef Jaeger (2009) (/showthread.php?tid=2399) |
Jere' M - Josef Jaeger (2009) - Simon - 12-10-2025 Josef Jaeger turns thirteen when Adolf Hitler is appointed Germany's new Chancellor. When his mother dies, Josef is sent to Munich to live with his uncle, Ernst Roehm, the openly-homosexual chief of the Nazi brown shirts. Josef thinks he's found a father-figure in his uncle and a mentor in his uncle's lover, streetwise Rudy, and when Roehm's political connections land Josef a role in a propaganda movie, Josef's sure he's found the life he's always wanted. But while living in Berlin during the film's production, Josef falls in love with a Jewish boy, David, and Josef begins questioning his uncle's beliefs. Complications arise when an old friend of his mother's tells Josef that his mother was secretly murdered by the SS due to her political beliefs, possibly on Roehm's order. Josef confides in his Hitler Youth leader, Max Klieg. Klieg admits he knows a few things, but he won't share them with Josef till the boy proves himself worthy of a confidence. Conflicting beliefs war within Josef until he must decide where his true loyalties lie, and what he really believes in. Quote: The eponymous narrator of this coming-of-age story is a fictitious thirteen-year-old nephew of Ernst Roehm, leader of the SA in the newly-born Third Reich, with whom the boy goes to live in Munich following the sudden death of his mother. That the background has been thoroughly-researched is evident from the extraordinary attention to details of the setting. The historical characters mentioned are also convincingly portrayed, which is a fascinating treat in view of the tiresome popular tendency to depict the National Socialist leaders, alone amongst humanity, as absurdly devoid of redeeming features. In the case of Roehm, however, the humanisation may be overdone; he is depicted as more skeptical of anti-semitism and book-burning than the known facts warrant, and there is little sense of his pronouncedly proletarian brutishness. |