The Passenger
By (Author) Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz
Introduction by Andr Aciman
Pushkin Press
Pushkin Press Classics
2nd December 2025
7th November 2024
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Classic fiction: literary and general
833.912
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
'Gripping' - Telegraph
'Brilliant' - Sunday Times
'Riveting' - Guardian
The devastating rediscovered classic written from the horrors of Nazi Germany, as one Jewish man attempts to flee persecution in the wake of Kristallnacht
BERLIN, NOVEMBER 1938. With storm troopers battering against his door, Otto Silbermann must flee out the back of his own home. He emerges onto streets thrumming with violence: it is Kristallnacht, and synagogues are being burnt, Jews rounded up and their businesses destroyed.
Turned away from establishments he had long patronised, betrayed by friends and colleagues, Otto finds his life as a respected businessman has dissolved overnight. Desperately trying to conceal his Jewish identity, he takes train after train across Germany in a race to escape this homeland that is no longer home.
Twenty-three-year-old Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz wrote The Passenger at breakneck speed in 1938, fresh in the wake of the Kristallnacht pogroms, and his prose flies at the same pace. Shot through with Hitckcockian tension, The Passenger is a blisteringly immediate story of flight and survival in Nazi Germany.
'A fascinating historical rediscovery shed light on the closing borders and rising prejudices of current times... in a tense, rising nightmare thats timelessly relevant' - Guardian, Books of the Year
'This thrillers rediscovery has become an international publishing sensation, which feels like some restitution' - The Times, Books of the Year
'Part John Buchan, part Franz Kafka and wholly riveting. It is also uncannily prescient [...] a gripping novel that plunges the reader into the gloom of Nazi Germany as the darkness was descending' - Jonathan Freedland
'There have been a number of great novels about the Second World War that have come to light again in recent times, most notably Suite Franaise and Alone in Berlin. Im not sure that The Passenger might not be the greatest of them' - David Mills
'Gripping and viscerally affecting... Boschwitzs feel for his setting and characters makes most of the historical fiction written about the Nazi era seem simplistic and ersatz' - Jake Kerridge
Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz was born in Berlin in 1915. He left Germany in 1935 for Oslo, Norway, studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, and wrote two novels, including The Passenger. Boschwitz eventually settled in England in 1939, although he was interned as a German "enemy alien" after war broke out-despite his Jewish background-and subsequently shipped to Australia. In 1942, Boschwitz was allowed to return to England, but his ship was torpedoed by a German submarine and he was killed along with all 362 passengers. He was twenty-seven years old.