Hegi, Ursula: *1946

Stones from the River, 1994 - Summary

  • Trudi Montag is a Zwerg, a dwarf. Born to a mentally disturbed woman who dies when Trudi is a small child, the girl reaches adulthood under the loving care of her father, a pay-librarian in a small German town. (A pay-librarian is one who runs a library as a business and charges the patrons to borrow books.) Trudi is angry, deeply resentful of her "differentness," and she uses her unique status in a variety of ways, both helpful and vengeful toward others. For example, Trudi tells stories, some of which enchant and comfort frightened children during the war, others harm the lives and personal security of the townsfolk whom the story teller doesn't like. World War II comes and goes in Burgdorf (a fictional German town); Trudi finds and loses romantic love; her father dies; and she begins, at the end of the tale, to reflect on the ways in which she has contributed to her own suffering and that of others.
    Excerpted, with permission, from theLiterature, Arts, and Medicine Database at New York University School of Medicine, © New York University.