Vagabonding through changing Germany Harry A 1881 Franck Books

This book was originally published prior to 1923, and represents a reproduction of an important historical work, maintaining the same format as the original work. While some publishers have opted to apply OCR (optical character recognition) technology to the process, we believe this leads to sub-optimal results (frequent typographical errors, strange characters and confusing formatting) and does not adequately preserve the historical character of the original artifact. We believe this work is culturally important in its original archival form. While we strive to adequately clean and digitally enhance the original work, there are occasionally instances where imperfections such as blurred or missing pages, poor pictures or errant marks may have been introduced due to either the quality of the original work or the scanning process itself. Despite these occasional imperfections, we have brought it back into print as part of our ongoing global book preservation commitment, providing customers with access to the best possible historical reprints. We appreciate your understanding of these occasional imperfections, and sincerely hope you enjoy seeing the book in a format as close as possible to that intended by the original publisher.
Vagabonding through changing Germany Harry A 1881 Franck Books
Published in 1920, an account of the author's travels in Germany in 1919, a few months after end of the war -- when people were out "hamstering" for food and some were already talking casually about the next war, surprising the American author with their friendliness (and their love of uniforms). You, the modern reader, know what's coming next, but in the book, no one knows. It's eerie. In 1919, no one has heard of nazis, but this book lets you see just how fertile the ground was for what was coming. The book includes the author's photographs -- but they are reproduced poorly in this reprint. Buy an old used copy, rather than the reprint, if you can find one. Franck was a great travel writer -- he wrote a whole slew of books. After this one, I started reading all of them and recommending them to my friends -- I'm now in the middle of his 'Vagabonding Around the World,' published in 1910. This man could see!Product details
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Vagabonding through changing Germany Harry A 1881 Franck Books Reviews
A must read.... This timely evaluation of Germany's mood just as WWI ended is priceless.
Favorite Travel Writer!
Harry Franck has insights that will always seem current.
Harry Franck was an American who at the end of World War I was about 38 years old. As a professional tramp who would write several busking books, he demonstrates close detail for the individuals he meets and the social group that they are supposed to represent, usually confirming those individuals are representative of their stereotypes. Germany to him, as it should have been, was several distinctive areas with different types of Germans and varied sufferings from the war. One exception could be hunger, from which all areas suffered, the great un-taught fact about European History leading up to Nazism and World War II. There are no apologists for Nazism, although there are Holocaust deniers and defenders of antisemitism. There should be apologists. The blockade starved a defeated generation. Germans Franck meets do express displeasure about Jews, 1.5% of the population, who are too prominent in society but absent from warfare defense. Other than that, Germans are stoic people, attending church, standing in food lines, plowing with their cattle in the fields, drinking watered-down beer, and most of all treating an American with some hospitality as inflation takes a stranglehold on their way of life. They were also especially hungry for tobacco.
On pages 124-125, Wants Ads are of particular interest to Franck, part of the humor and sarcasm reported on his Wikipedia page. A merchant advertises his 24 year old daughter, Jewish, and broadcasts her dowry. A "neat little BLONDE of 19" seeks a Jew for marriage. One advertiser seeks a husband for a regal older lady, again Jewish. The would-be husband must be "a merchant or a government official of high rank". The next page finds a general reaction stirring beneath the surface "Open your eyes! Comrades, you know the bloodsuckers! Comrades, who went to the front as volunteers? ... The Jews, who sat comfortably and safely in canteens and offices ...Germany for Germans ... Down with Jewry."
In other places meeting people face to face, Germans longed for the return of the Kaiser. Franck calls these Germans the most militaristic people on earth. Not in the book, Wilhelm was called "the greatest criminal in history". Yet with these actions and accusations, the Germans are helpless in a reticent and organized way, proud of their achievements if not their nationalism.
The French were busy crossing out German signs in blended places, I guess Alsace-Lorraine. The Polish were opportunistically blunt as well, no friends of their supposed superiors to the West. If there was a German fury, the "ersatz" of their daily diet suppressed it, other than what could be printed in newspapers. These were for a brief moment un-militaristic people. Franck notes their suffering, but as he himself is taking part in the experience, he is not sympathetic, just cruelly factual.
Astute observations about conditions at the very end of WW1 in Germany from somebody close to the scene.
I first read Mr. Franck's "A Vagabond Journey Around The World" in high school over forty years ago and the memory has stayed with me to this day. His writing is very good and his "ground level" perspective of the people and places provides a facinating historic perspective of the world at the beginning of the last century. "Vagabonding Through Changing Germany" continues this facinating historical perspective of the people of Germany immediately after the World War I Armistace. The book is a re-print copy by Forgotten Books of an original text no longer covered by copyright. The reprint is quite good and nothing is lost. If you enjoy true adventure with interesting historical insights I highly recomment this book.
Very interesting to read a first-hand account of germany after WW1. This guy isn't a writer, so sometimes it was a lot of work slogging through it. He kept detailed notes of everything he did though, so as a primary source this is great, but as an interesting read it's not so good.
Published in 1920, an account of the author's travels in Germany in 1919, a few months after end of the war -- when people were out "hamstering" for food and some were already talking casually about the next war, surprising the American author with their friendliness (and their love of uniforms). You, the modern reader, know what's coming next, but in the book, no one knows. It's eerie. In 1919, no one has heard of nazis, but this book lets you see just how fertile the ground was for what was coming. The book includes the author's photographs -- but they are reproduced poorly in this reprint. Buy an old used copy, rather than the reprint, if you can find one. Franck was a great travel writer -- he wrote a whole slew of books. After this one, I started reading all of them and recommending them to my friends -- I'm now in the middle of his 'Vagabonding Around the World,' published in 1910. This man could see!

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