Fenn Kaß : Der Roman eines Erlösten by Batty Weber

(4 User reviews)   741
By Linda Rogers Posted on Dec 23, 2025
In Category - Grammar
Weber, Batty, 1860-1940 Weber, Batty, 1860-1940
German
"Fenn Kaß : Der Roman eines Erlösten" by Batty Weber is a novel written in the early 20th century. The story follows a gifted village boy from Luxembourg, Fenn Kaß, as he leaves his rural Catholic world for a city seminary, torn between a priestly path and his fascination with machines. Around him move classmates Heine “Putty” Heinen and Fritz Lamp...
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painting a portrait of faith, class, and coming-of-age in a borderland community. It promises a humane, gently ironic study of vocation, friendship, and the pull between tradition and modern ambition. The opening of the novel lingers over the Luxembourg countryside, the village of Wiesing, and its faded prosperity before turning to Fenn, a Küster’s son, who hauls wood, secretly reads about steam engines, and prepares to depart for the Gymnasium and church-run boarding school. We meet the kindly Pfarrer Reining and his sister Gretchen, the practical teacher Braun and his daughter Marjänni, and Fenn’s two friends: dreamy, anxious Putty, and entitled Fritz from a declining farm family. An evening of small-town life unfolds—cards, bells, and a rough supper at Lampert’s—hinting at debts, pride, and social tensions. Fenn’s visit to the cobbler Pichert frames his inner conflict: priesthood for stability versus a maker’s urge to build machines. At dawn the boys ride to the city with the taciturn farmhand Wöllem, encounter a skeptical innkeeper and street taunts, and enter the Konvikt under the ink-splashed gaze of a plaster guardian angel. A fiery, domineering director receives them, alternately thundering about moral peril and cooing paternal assurances, while the mothers and fathers hover between awe and worry. The section closes with dorm assignments and a quiet moment in the park, where Fenn’s mother tries to slip him a small coin—an intimate gesture at the threshold of his new life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Mark Jackson
1 week ago

Make no mistake, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Highly recommended for everyone.

Jessica Torres
4 days ago

Honestly, the plot twists are genuinely surprising without feeling cheap or forced. I'm sending the link to all my friends.

Barbara Roberts
4 months ago

Without a doubt, the author's voice is distinct, making the complex topics easy to digest. Worth every second of your time.

Daniel Mitchell
2 months ago

I have to admit, the writing style is poetic but not overly flowery. A valuable addition to my digital library.

5
5 out of 5 (4 User reviews )

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