« Home | The Tender Bar by J.R. Moehringer » | The Time Traveler's Wife, Audrey Niffenegger » | Atonement by Ian McEwan » | The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory » | The Bitch in the House: 26 Women Tell the Truth ab... » | Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons by Lorna Landviks » | Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides » | The Known World by Edward P Jones » | The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck » | The Wapshot Chronicle by John Cheever »

The Vision of Emma Blau by Ursula Hegi

The Vision of Emma Blau is the luminous epic of a bicultural family filled with passion and aspirations, tragedy and redemption. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Stefan Blau, whom readers will remember from Stones from the River, flees Burgdorf, a small town in Germany, and comes to America in search of the vision he has dreamed of every night. The novel closes nearly a century later with Stefan's granddaughter, Emma, and the legacy of his dream: the Wasserburg, a once-grand apartment house filled with the hidden truths of its inhabitants both past and present. Ursula Hegi creates a fascinating picture of immigrants in America: their dreams and disappointments, the challenges of assimilation, the frailty of language and its transcendence, the love that bonds generations and the cultural wedges that drive them apart.