In A Trace of Smoke, Anton flees into the world of Karl May’s Wild West books. Anton, like many German children since the 1890s, identifies with the strong and noble Apache brave Winnetou. Other Winnetou fans include Albert Einstein, Erich Kästner, and Adolf Hitler (yes, that’s quite a range).
Karl May is often referred to as the
most read German writer, with more than 200 million copies of his books in
print. He’s popular outside of Germany too, and he’s also the most translated
German writer, with works translated into more than thirty languages (including
Esperanto and Latin). Here’s picture of Karl May dressed up as his German
hero, Old Shatterhand:
Despite all that, Karl May is
practically unknown in the United States, and his works weren’t published here
until 2001. When I arrived in Germany in the late 1980s, I had never heard of
him until I saw my host sister’s large leather-bound collection of his books.
She gleefully received a Karl May book every year at Christmas and on her
birthday. The books were forest green, like the trees that Winnetou rode
through, the spines had the titles in gilt, and the covers had pictures of
Winnetou and his friend Old Shatterhand posing with horses, guns, and
wilderness. These were books built to last.
I read a few of her books and watched
the Winnetou films in rerun on TV, but they slipped right through my head.
Winnetou was played by French actor Pierce Brice, and he was always clean
shaven, with immaculate buckskins, and perfect hair. He cantered through the
mountains of Italy on a perfectly groomed horse.
These tales were nothing like the
Native American culture I’d seen when I went to school in New Mexico and
Colorado. I’d read Bury My Heart at
Wounded Knee and learned about the Trail of Tears. It didn’t look like that
there.
I’d come to Germany to learn about
German culture, not idealized versions of the American West, so I didn’t give
them much thought at first. But over time, I realized how important the ideal
of wide open spaces and simple nobility was to people living in mostly urban
areas and trying to live down their own complicated history.
Winnetou stands for courage to do
the right thing, strength to get through difficult times, and a strong moral
compass that never wavers. He might live in a brutal world, but his heart never
faltered.
So, when Anton needed a place to
escape the rigors of a difficult life in Weimar-era Germany, I knew just where
to send him.
Rebecca Cantrell has graciously offered to donate a copy
of her just-released novel, A Game of Lies, to one lucky reader this week. All you have
to do is comment on this blog post by Thursday, September 15, and we'll have a
random drawing to select the winner on Friday. It's that
easy! Good luck!



