Where the Coffee Cherries Shine

Where the Coffee Cherries Shine

340 pages

Hardcover

Genre: Fiction, Literary Novel
A moving story about new beginnings, longing, and memories

1953, in the German economic wonderland: A young woman from Ludwigshafen stands with her newlywed husband at the railing of the ocean liner that will take them from Hamburg to Colombia. He is expecting his first job as a geologist in the Andean city of Tunja, while she looks forward to her uncertain future as a “temporary emigrant” with equal parts joy and concern – separated from her protective extended family in her religious parents' home, having sacrificed her music studies and unfamiliar with Colombian culture and history. In Tunja, they are confronted with the often colonial attitudes of the Germans living abroad, who mostly remain silent about the past. While her husband conducts research in the field, the young German woman is busy furnishing her new home and finds connections as a chamber musician. She maintains her “bond with her homeland” in her letters on airmail paper, which express longing and self-assertion: collected in twelve folders. With these documents, fragments of stories, and photo albums, as well as on a trip to Tunja with two of her children, the narrator follows in the footsteps of her parents and grandparents a good seventy years later. A meticulously and sincerely crafted literary dialogue between the generations.

 

“The aroma of coffee and chamber music in the Colombian Cordillera: a delicately composed, sensitive literary masterpiece that reflects the German post-war wonderland in the distant Andes.” – Christian Döring, editor at large for Friedenauer Presse

German title: Wo die Kaffeekirschen leuchten - Roman
ISBN: 978-3-7518-8048-0
Publisher: Friedenauer Presse
Publication date: 2026

Licence

Novel

Nicola Denis, born in Celle in 1972, lives in western France as a literary translator and author. She has translated works by Éric Vuillard and Honoré de Balzac for Friedenauer Presse. In 2021, she received the prestigious Prix Lémanique de la traduction, and in 2023, the Eugen Helmlé Translation Prize. Where the Coffee Cherries Shine is her second novel.