The year is 1932. Hans Schwartz is Jewish, the son of a Stuttgart doctor who asserts that the rise of the Nazis is "a temporary illness, something like measles which will pass off as soon as the economic situation improves."
The Holocaust would be unthinkable for these characters, but of course it looms over the story: Hans’s friend, the young Count Konradin von Hohenfels, has a mother who keeps a portrait of Hitler on her dresser.
The two boys share their most private thoughts and trips to the countryside of southwest Germany, discuss poetry and the past and present of their country, and argue the existence of a benevolent God.
About Fred Uhlman
He was born in Stuttgart in 1901 and, as an anti-Nazi lawyer, was forced to leave in 1933 for England, where he became a well-known painter.




