"Stones from the River" is a daring, dramatic and complex novel of life
in Germany. It is set in Burgdorf, a small fictional German town,
between 1915 and 1951. The protagonist is Trudi Montag, a Zwerg -- the
German word for dwarf woman. As a dwarf she is set apart, the outsider
whose physical "otherness" has a corollary in her refusal to be a part
of Burgdorf's silent complicity during and after World War II. Trudi
establishes her status and power, not through beauty, marriage, or
motherhood, but rather as the town's librarian and relentless collector
of stories.
Through Trudi's unblinking eyes, we witness the growing impact of Nazism
on the ordinary townsfolk of Burgdorf as they are thrust on to a larger
moral stage and forced to make choices that will forever mark their
lives. "Stones from the River" is a story of secrets, parceled out
masterfully by Trudi -- and by Ursula Hegi -- as they reveal the truth
about living through unspeakable times.