The Center of the World (novel)
Editor | Jonas Sachwitz |
---|---|
Author | Andreas Steinhöfel |
Translator | Alisa Jaffa |
Language | German |
Publication date | 1998 |
Publication place | Germany |
ISBN | 9-780-30748271-6 |
OCLC | 742610833 |
The Center of the World (original German title: Die Mitte der Welt) is a novel by Andreas Steinhöfel from 1998.[1][2] It is a story about the problems of growing up, puberty, envy and jealousy, friendship and love. The novel was nominated for the German Youth Literature Award. The book has been translated into English by Alisa Jaffa and was edited by Jonas Sachwitz. It was published in the UK under the title Centre of My World.
Plot
[edit]The main plot of the novel begins when Phil's best friend Kat (whose actual name is "Katja") returns from her summer vacation with her family. This plot covers the time between July and shortly after New Year's the following year. It is intercut with many different flashbacks.
Phil is seventeen years old, has a twin sister (Dianne), a best friend (Kat), a slightly crazy mother (Glass) with constantly changing male relationships. Some of the men in Glass' life, Phil remembers quite well. For example, there was Martin, the gardener, that Glass employed because it seemed impossible to maintain the upper hand in "Visibles" wild garden. "Visible" was the name of the house that Glass inherited of her sister Stella upon her arrival from the United States. The story does not primarily treat Phil's homosexuality, but rather stresses the difficulties he has to cope with in everyday life.
With his mother and his sister, Phil lives in a huge mansion called 'Visible' which is located slightly remote from their city. The city's inhabitants barely have contact with this weird family. The main exception to this is Phil's best friend Kat, the daughter of their school's principal, who repeatedly violates her parents' interdiction of visiting Phil. Another important person is the lawyer Tereza, who is friends with the family and acts as a kind of mentor to Phil.
The story depicts the past of the family through emotional anecdotes, particularly through stories about the no longer existent father, an uncle as a compensating father figure and childhood memories of Phil and Dianne. Episodes in the present deal with Phil's love for Nicholas, conversations with his mentor and disputes between his sister and his mother. The story is written in the first-person perspective.
Characters
[edit]- Phil: 17 years old, gay. Not knowing his real father has left a hole in his life. He serves as the narrator of the novel.
- Dianne: his twin sister. She and Phil used to be inseparable; now Phil misses their closeness, and doesn't understand why Dianne has grown so distant.
- Glass: Dianne and Phil's mother. She hails from the U.S. but has lived in Germany, ever since, while being 9 months pregnant, followed her sister, Stella, whose palace-like home, "Visible," she inherited after Stella died in an accident.
- Tereza: an attorney and Glass' employer. One of Phil's closest confidants.
- Pascal: Tereza's girlfriend.
- Nicholas: the son of rich parents from the wealthy part of town. He is a new student in Phil and Kat's school, the summer of the beginning of the main plot.
- Katja ("Kat"): a childhood friend of Phil's. They met in the hospital when, according to Glass's wishes, Phil underwent otoplasty to correct his protruding ears. Kat's father is the principal of their high school.
Awards
[edit]- 1999: Nomination: Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis.[3]
Reception
[edit]In the nationwide German newspaper Die Zeit, Konrad Heidkamp praised Steinhöfel for excelling himself: "The flashbacks from the children's point of view that allow room for Steinhöfel's deadpan humor, and the romantic fairytales - from the pond via the black wooden doll to the castle with royal children -, combined with the young literate author's smart way of introducing these two layers into the storyline, make this a book on the tenderness of reading and the risk inherent to strong feelings."[4]
Sequel: Defender – Geschichten aus der Mitte der Welt
[edit]The author continues the stories of some characters in 'Defender – Geschichten aus der Mitte der Welt' in several short stories. This book was also nominated for the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis. It has not (yet) been translated into English.
Movie adaptation
[edit]A movie adaptation of the book was released on November 10, 2016 with the director being Jakob M. Erwa. The movie was produced by Neue Schönhauser Filmproduktion, mojo:pictures, and Prisma Film; it will be distributed by Universum Film. The project received financial support from the Filmfonds Wien in the amount of 120,000 € and from the mandate of the Federal Government for culture and media, minister of state Monika Grütters, in the amount of 220,000 €. Louis Hofmann starred as Phil, Jannik Schümann portrayed Nicholas and Svenja Jung played Kat. Additional roles include Sabine Timoteo as Glass, Inka Friedrich and Nina Proll as Tereza and Pascal, Ada Philine Stappenbeck as Dianne, and Sascha Alexander Geršak as Glass's new boyfriend Michael.[5][6][7][8]
External links
[edit]- Rufus Beck: Rätselhafte Melancholie, Süddeutsche Zeitung, 23. Februar 2006
- "Die Mitte der Welt" as a German theater play from Christian Kühn
References
[edit]- ^ "Die Mitte der Welt". Carlsen Verlag. 23 February 2004. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
- ^ "The Center of my World". Penguin Random House. Laurel Leaf. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
- ^ "Nominierung: Die Mitte der Welt". Arbeitskreis Jugendliteratur. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
- ^ Konrad Heidkamp: Luchs 136: Andreas Steinhöfels Jugendroman „Die Mitte der Welt“. In: Die Zeit. 1998.
- ^ Steinhöfel, Andreas (2015-03-15). "Die Mitte der Welt - Casting" (in German). Retrieved 2015-06-06.
- ^ "Filmfonds Wien - Die Mitte der Welt" (in German). Retrieved 2015-06-06.
- ^ "mojo:pictures" (in German). Retrieved 2015-06-06.
- ^ "Kulturstaatsministerin Grütters fördert Film- und Drehbuchprojekte mit rund 2 Mio. Euro" [Minister of state Grütters supports movie and screenplay projects with about 2 million euros] (in German). 2015-05-29. Retrieved 2015-06-06.
- 1998 German novels
- German bildungsromans
- Novels with gay themes
- Young adult novels
- LGBTQ literature in Germany
- Gay male teen fiction
- German children's novels
- 1998 children's books
- LGBTQ-related young adult novels
- LGBTQ-related children's novels
- German LGBTQ novels
- German novels adapted into films
- 1990s LGBTQ novels