Devorah, an Austrian Jew, travels to Jerusalem in search of her family history, and she soon becomes romantically involved with a young Palestinian whom she suspects may be using her for political reasons.
Anna Mitgutsch Book order
Anna Mitgutsch is an author whose work is characterized by a deep exploration of the human psyche and social relationships. Her writing often delves into themes of identity, memory, and the search for roots in a complex world. Mitgutsch focuses on the detailed portrayal of characters' inner experiences and how external circumstances shape their destinies. Her stylistic precision and insightful perspective on human nature make her literary creations unforgettable.






- 1997
- 1995
In Foreign Cities deals with an American woman who, after fifteen years of marriage to an Austrian businessman, begins an affair with a young American singer, leaves her husband and two children, and returns to her homeland in search of her lost identity as a poet and the personal artistic fulfillment that she feels has been denied to her in the foreign environment. Lillian's journey leads her through a series of internal and external confrontations with a past ideal that is not compatible with the present reality, on her way to a final resolution of the conflicts with herself and with family members who haunt her memories: a well-adjusted sister who is her social opposite; a grandmother who envisioned for her the literary success she has not realized; a father who rejected her; the husband and children whom she has left behind. The ending brings the tragic insight that she has been victimized by a false perception of her life and talent. Her problem is not the world around her but lies within herself.
- 1987
Set in Austria, this novel is the relentlessly bleak tale of three generations of child abuse. Told from the point of view of Vera, who was beaten frequently by her mother Marie, told to be "grateful" and kept trapped between her feuding parents, it examines the seemingly unbreakable cycle of abuse and masochism. Integrated into the text of Vera's memories isthe narrative of Marie's own brutalized childhood, as told to Vera: growing up on a farm in a large family during World War II, Marie too was beaten by her parents, forced to do backbreaking labor and driven into a loveless marriage. Vera relates her past in obsessive detail in an attempt to understand her own daughter's unhappiness. She vowed never to lay a hand on her, to love rather than torture her child, only to realize that she has damaged her through her inability to experience love or happiness. Though completely believable and psychologically acute, Three Daughters closes in on itself and is claustrophobically, unnecessarily repetitive.