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The Other Side of the Wall


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Other Side of the Wall

Contributors:

By (Author) Simon Schwartz
Illustrated by Simon Schwartz

ISBN:

9781467758406

Publisher:

Lerner Publishing Group

Imprint:

Graphic Universe

Publication Date:

1st January 2015

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Children

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Childrens / Teenage general interest: History and the past
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Politics and government

Dewey:

305.90691409

Physical Properties

Number of Pages:

112

Dimensions:

Width 178mm, Height 229mm

Description

A memoir from a talented graphic novelist that explores an important period in history from a personal perspective.

Simon Schwartz was born in 1982 in the GDR (East Germany). One and a half years later, he left the country with his parents, and the family resettled in West Berlin. As political dissidents, his parents experienced harassment by the Stasi and a lack of understanding from members of their own family. This striking graphic novel memoir chronicles the family's difficult journey to get to the other side of the Berlin Wall.

Reviews

"In the opening pages of this graphic memoir, the author as a young child realizes that his neighbors and relatives are not free to move around. They live on the eponymous other side of the wall. Schwartz shares his story growing up in West Berlin and that of his parents' lives in East Berlin as they grow increasingly disillusioned with the Communist government of East Germany and face great resistance to their desire to immigrate. Depicted in black and white with a realistic style that portrays a grim history without being overly stark, this graphic novel shares an important view of recent history. Likely to have greatest resonance with high schoolers, this book would be appropriate for middle school as well. While it might appeal most to adults with personal memories of a communist empire, Schwartz's work is also a fantastic supplement to traditional textbooks. A good addition to school and public libraries looking to add diversity to their teen or secondary education graphic novel collections." --School Library Journal

--Journal

"In Watkinson's graceful translation, German author-illustrator Schwartz charts each painful step of his parents' departure from East Germany. Black-and-white panels set amid the grim institutional architecture of post-WWII East Berlin record the courtship of Schwartz's focused father and artistic mother, who meet as university students and, despite their differences, realize that they're attracted to one another. 'You're in the church' he asks disbelievingly; just as disbelievingly, she counters, 'You're in the party' When the two begin to spend time with dissidents, and the state apparatus starts to close around them, they apply for an exit permit. But their departure is blocked, and Schwartz describes with anguish the family's alienation from his father's parents and its persecution by the Stasi, the East German secret police. The story suffers somewhat from the way Schwartz shuffles back and forth between the family's time pre- and post-emigration; it's not always clear what's happening when. Complex political undercurrents demand a lot from readers, too, but Schwartz's smart, probing account makes this piece of history matter."--Publishers Weekly

--Journal

"The Cold War tension represented by the Berlin Wall likely still has some real estate in the German psyche today, but it might still be rather remote to most American readers. Schwartz's multiple-award winner (in his native Germany) will go some way toward remedying that. Schwartz recalls his parents' struggle to make a life in Communist East Berlin and, eventually, to immigrate to the democratic west side of the wall, at the cost of careers, friends, and family. The complex politics are set aside in favor of a narrative that captures the desperation of adults caught in an oppressive society and the confusion of a young child seeing it through the prism of family. Schwartz's black-and-white cartooning abets this simpler, emotionally resonant style with large, minimalist faces that powerfully express feelings, while realistic backgrounds give an underlying sense of authenticity. This slim volume typifies the format's great strength in this area, which is not to deliver hard facts but to bring the human face of history off the page and into readers' hearts." --Booklist

--Journal

Author Bio

Simon Schwartz grew up in Berlin, Germany. Since 2006 he has been working as a freelance illustrator for several magazines, newspapers, agencies and other clients. In 2011 he began teaching illustration as an Adjunct Professor at the Design Department of the Hamburg Universtity of Applied Sciences. Druben! was nominated for the German Youth Literature Prize 2010 and awarded the ICOM Independent Comic Award for Outstanding Scenario 2010.

Simon Schwartz was born in 1982 in the GDR (East Germany). One and a half years later, he left the country with his parents, and the family resettled in West Berlin. As political dissidents, his parents experienced harassment by the Stasi and a lack of understanding from members of their own family. This striking graphic novel memoir chronicles the family's difficult journey to get to the other side of the Berlin Wall.

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