After Midnight (Keun novel)

1937 novel by Irmgard Keun From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

After Midnight (German: Nach Mitternacht) is a 1937 novel by Irmgard Keun, set in Frankfurt am Main during the early Nazi period.[2][3][4][5][6]

OriginaltitleNach Mitternacht
LanguageGerman
Quick facts Author, Original title ...
After Midnight
First edition cover
AuthorIrmgard Keun
Original titleNach Mitternacht
TranslatorJames Cleugh
Anthea Bell
LanguageGerman
GenrePolitical novel
Set inFrankfurt am Main, 1936
PublisherQuerido Verlag
Publication date
1937
Publication placeNetherlands
Published in English
1938
Media typePrint: hardback
Pages236[1]
833.912
LC ClassPT2621.E92 N313
Preceded byDas Mädchen, mit dem die Kinder nicht verkehren durften 
Followed byThird Class Express 
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Plot

Frankfurt am Main, 1936. Sanna Moder is in love with her cousin Franz, and she and her friends try and enjoy life and what freedom they have in a city and country that is falling deeper under Nazi rule.[7]

Publication

After Midnight was rejected by Keun's Amsterdam-based publisher Allert de Lange, who feared that the book would damage the firm's commercial interests in Germany. Another Amsterdam-based publisher, Querido, would publish the book in 1937.[8] An English edition was published the following year by Alfred A. Knopf, translated by James Cleugh.[9]

Reception

In a 1985 review when it was reprinted, Publishers Weekly said of it, "Much of the material is dated, and the clever repartees, the little ironies seem sadly irrelevant now. Yet Keun's spirited defense of common decency stands out after all this time."[3] In Inside Story, Dr Geoff Wilkes called it "a minor masterpiece of satiric simplicity."[10]

Adaptations

In 1981, After Midnight was adapted into a film, directed by Wolf Gremm and starring Désirée Nosbusch as Sanna.[11][12][13]

References

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