The brilliant, bitter novel of lovers in exile, living on borrowed time in the nightmare world of Nazi haunted Paris.  It is 1939 and despite a law banning him from performing surgery, Ravic--a German doctor and refugee living in Paris--has been treating some of the city's most elite citizens for two years on the behalf of two less-than-skillful French physicians.

Forbidden to return to his own country, and dodging the everyday dangers of jail and deportation, Ravic manages to hang on--all the while searching for the Nazi who tortured him back in Germany. And though he's given up on the possibility of love, life has a curious way of taking a turn for the romantic, even during the worst of times. . . .
1
 
 
THE WOMAN VEERED toward Ravic. She walked quickly, but with a peculiar stagger. Ravic first noticed her when she was almost beside him. He saw a pale face, high cheekbones and wide-set eyes. The face was rigid and masklike; it looked hollowed out, and her eyes in the light from the street lamps had an expression of such glassy emptiness that they caught his attention.
 
The woman passed so close she almost touched him. He reached out and seized her arm with one hand; the next moment she tottered and would have fallen, if he had not supported her.
 
He held her arm tight. “Where are you going?” he asked after a moment.
 
The woman stared at him. “Let me go!” she whispered.
 
Ravic did not answer. He still held her arm tight.
 
“Let me go!” The woman barely moved her lips.
 
Ravic had the impression that she did not see him at all. She was looking through him, somewhere into the empty night. He was only something that had stopped her and toward which she spoke. “Let me go!”
 
Ravic saw at once she was no whore. Neither was she drunk. He did not hold her arm so tight now. She could have freed herself easily, but it did not occur to her. Ravic waited awhile. “Where can you really want to go at night, alone at this time in Paris?” he quietly asked once more and released her arm.
 
The woman remained silent. But she did not walk on. Once stopped, she seemed unable to move again.
 
Ravic leaned against the railing of the bridge. He could feel the damp porous stone under his hands. “Perhaps down there?” He motioned with his head backward and down at the Seine, which moved restlessly toward the shadows of the Pont de l’Alma in a gray and gradually fading glimmer.
 
The woman did not answer.
 
“Too early,” Ravic said. “Too early and much too cold in November.”
 
He took out a package of cigarettes and fumbled in his pockets for matches. He saw there were only two left in the little box and he bent down cautiously in order to shelter the flame with his hands against the soft breeze from the river.
 
“Give me a cigarette, too,” the woman said in an almost toneless voice.
 
Ravic straightened up and held the package toward her. “Algerian. Black tobacco of the Foreign Legion. Probably it’s too strong for you. I have nothing else with me.”
 
The woman shook her head and took a cigarette. Ravic held the burning match for her. She smoked hastily, inhaling deeply. Ravic threw the match over the railing. It fell through the dark like a little shooting star and went out only when it reached the water.
 
A taxi drove slowly across the bridge. The driver stopped. He looked toward them and waited for a moment, then he stepped on the accelerator and drove along the wet dark-gleaming Avenue George V.
 
Ravic felt suddenly tired. He had been working all day and had not been able to sleep. And so he had gone out again to drink. But now, unexpectedly, in the wet coolness of the late night, tiredness fell over him like a sack.
 
He looked at the woman. What had made him stop her? Something was wrong with her, that much was clear. But what did it matter to him? He had already seen plenty of women with whom something was wrong, particularly at night, particularly in Paris, and it made no difference to him now and all he wanted was a few hours’ sleep.
 
“Go home,” he said. “What are you doing on the streets at this hour? You’ll only get into trouble.”
 
He turned up the collar of his coat and was about to walk away. The woman looked at him as though she did not understand. “Home?” she repeated.
 
Ravic shrugged his shoulders. “Home, back to your apartment, to your hotel, call it what you like, somewhere. You don’t want to be picked up by the police?”
 
“To the hotel! My God!” the woman said.
 
Ravic paused. Once more someone who does not know where to go, he thought. He could have foreseen it. It was always the same. At night they did not know where to go and the next morning they were gone before you were awake. Then they knew where to go. The old cheap desperation that came with the dark and left with it. He threw his cigarette away. As if he himself did not know it and know it to the point of weariness!
 
“Come, let’s go somewhere and have a drink,” he said.
 
It was the simplest solution. Afterwards he could pay and leave and she could decide what to do.
 
The woman made an uncertain movement and stumbled. Ravic caught hold of her arm. “Tired?” he asked.
 
“I don’t know. I guess so.”
 
“Too tired to sleep?”
 
She nodded.
 
“That can happen. Come along, I’ll hold onto you.”
 
They walked up the Avenue Marceau. Ravic felt the woman leaning on him. She did not lean as if she were tired—she leaned as if she were about to fall and had to support herself.
 
They crossed the Avenue Pierre Ierde Serbie. Behind the intersection of the Rue de Chaillot the street opened up and, floating and dark in the distance, the mass of the Arc de Triomphe emerged out of the rainy sky.
 
Ravic pointed to the narrow lighted entrance of a cellar drinking place. “In here—we’ll still be able to get something.”
 
It was a bistro frequented by drivers. A few cabdrivers and two whores were sitting inside. The drivers were playing cards. The whores were drinking absinthe. With a quick glance they took stock of the woman. Then they turned indifferently away. The older one yawned audibly; the other began lackadaisically making up her face. In the background a busboy, with the face of a weary rat, sprinkled sawdust around and began to sweep the floor. Ravic and the woman sat down at a table near the entrance. It was more convenient; he could then leave more easily. He did not remove his coat. “What do you want to drink?” he asked.
 
“I don’t know. Anything at all.”
 
“Two calvados,” Ravic said to the waiter, who was in vest and rolled-up shirtsleeves. “And a package of Chesterfields.”
 
“Haven’t any,” the waiter announced. “Only French.”
 
“Well then, a pack of Laurens green.”
 
“We don’t have green either. Only blue.”
 
Ravic looked at the waiter’s arm, on which was tattooed a naked woman walking on clouds. The waiter, following his glance, clenched his fist and made his muscles jump. The woman on the clouds wiggled her belly lasciviously.
 
“All right, blue,” Ravic said.
 
The waiter grinned. “Maybe we still have one green left.” He shuffled off.
 
Ravic’s eyes followed him. “Red slippers on his feet,” he said, “and a nautch girl on his arm! He must have served in the Turkish navy.”
 
The woman put her hands on the table. She did it as if she never wanted to lift them again. Her hands had been well cared for but that meant nothing. Still they were not too well cared for. Ravic saw that the nail of the right middle finger was broken; it seemed to have been torn off without having been filed. In some places the polish was chipped.
 
The waiter brought the glasses and a package of cigarettes.
 
“Laurens green. Found one after all.”
 
“I thought you would. Were you in the navy?”
 
“No. Circus.”
 
“Better still.” Ravic handed a glass to the woman. “Here, drink this. It’s the best thing at this hour. Or would you like coffee?”
 
“No.”
 
“Drink it all at once.”
 
The woman nodded and emptied the glass. Ravic studied her. She had a colorless face, almost without expression. The mouth was full but pale, the contours appeared blurred. Only the hair was very beautiful—of a lustrous natural blond. She wore a Basque beret and under her raincoat a blue tailored suit. The suit had been made by a good tailor, but the green stone in the ring on her hand was much too big to be real.
 
“Do you want another?” Ravic asked.
 
She nodded.
 
He beckoned the waiter. “Two more calvados. But bigger glasses.”
 
“Bigger glasses? More in them, too?”
 
“Yes.”
 
“That would be two double calvados.”
 
“You’ve guessed it.”
 
Ravic decided to finish his drink quickly and leave. He was bored and very tired. Generally he was patient with such incidents; he had more than forty years of eventful living behind him. But he was only too well acquainted with situations like this.
 
He had lived in Paris for a number of years and not been able to sleep much at night—then one saw a lot on the way.
 
The waiter brought the drinks. Ravic took the penetrating and aromatic smelling apple brandy and placed it carefully in front of the woman. “Drink this too. It doesn’t help much, but it warms you up. And whatever’s the matter—don’t take it too hard. There’s nothing that remains serious for long.”
 
The woman looked at him. She did not drink.
 
“It’s true,” Ravic said. “Particularly at night. Night exaggerates.”
 
The woman still stared at him. “You don’t have to comfort me,” she said.
 
“All the better.”
 
Ravic looked around for the waiter. He had had enough. He knew this type. Probably Russian, he thought. The minute they sit down somewhere, while they’re still wet, they become arrogant.
 
“Are you Russian?” he asked.
 
“No.”
 
Ravic paid and rose to say goodbye. At the same moment the woman got up, too. She did it silently and naturally. Ravic looked at her uncertainly. All right, he thought then, I can do it just as well outside.
 
It had begun to rain. Ravic stopped in front of the door. “Which way are you going?” He was determined to take the opposite direction.
 
“I don’t know. Somewhere.”
 
“But—where do you live?”
 
The woman made a quick movement. “I can’t go there! No, no! I can’t do that! Not there!”
 
Suddenly her eyes were full of a wild fear. She has quarreled, Ravic thought, has had some sort of row and has run away. By tomorrow noon she will have thought it over and will go back.
“Don’t you know anyone to whom you could go? An acquaintance? You could call them up from the bistro.”
 
ERICH MARIA REMARQUE was born in Germany in 1898 and drafted into the German army during World War I. His novel All Quiet on the Western Front was published in 1928 and was an instant best seller. When the Nazis came to power, Remarque left Germany for Switzerland; he lost his German citizenship, his books were burned, and his films banned. He went to the United States in 1938 and became a citizen in 1947. He later lived in Switzerland with his second wife, the actress Paulette Goddard. He died in September 1970. View titles by Erich Maria Remarque

About

The brilliant, bitter novel of lovers in exile, living on borrowed time in the nightmare world of Nazi haunted Paris.  It is 1939 and despite a law banning him from performing surgery, Ravic--a German doctor and refugee living in Paris--has been treating some of the city's most elite citizens for two years on the behalf of two less-than-skillful French physicians.

Forbidden to return to his own country, and dodging the everyday dangers of jail and deportation, Ravic manages to hang on--all the while searching for the Nazi who tortured him back in Germany. And though he's given up on the possibility of love, life has a curious way of taking a turn for the romantic, even during the worst of times. . . .

Excerpt

1
 
 
THE WOMAN VEERED toward Ravic. She walked quickly, but with a peculiar stagger. Ravic first noticed her when she was almost beside him. He saw a pale face, high cheekbones and wide-set eyes. The face was rigid and masklike; it looked hollowed out, and her eyes in the light from the street lamps had an expression of such glassy emptiness that they caught his attention.
 
The woman passed so close she almost touched him. He reached out and seized her arm with one hand; the next moment she tottered and would have fallen, if he had not supported her.
 
He held her arm tight. “Where are you going?” he asked after a moment.
 
The woman stared at him. “Let me go!” she whispered.
 
Ravic did not answer. He still held her arm tight.
 
“Let me go!” The woman barely moved her lips.
 
Ravic had the impression that she did not see him at all. She was looking through him, somewhere into the empty night. He was only something that had stopped her and toward which she spoke. “Let me go!”
 
Ravic saw at once she was no whore. Neither was she drunk. He did not hold her arm so tight now. She could have freed herself easily, but it did not occur to her. Ravic waited awhile. “Where can you really want to go at night, alone at this time in Paris?” he quietly asked once more and released her arm.
 
The woman remained silent. But she did not walk on. Once stopped, she seemed unable to move again.
 
Ravic leaned against the railing of the bridge. He could feel the damp porous stone under his hands. “Perhaps down there?” He motioned with his head backward and down at the Seine, which moved restlessly toward the shadows of the Pont de l’Alma in a gray and gradually fading glimmer.
 
The woman did not answer.
 
“Too early,” Ravic said. “Too early and much too cold in November.”
 
He took out a package of cigarettes and fumbled in his pockets for matches. He saw there were only two left in the little box and he bent down cautiously in order to shelter the flame with his hands against the soft breeze from the river.
 
“Give me a cigarette, too,” the woman said in an almost toneless voice.
 
Ravic straightened up and held the package toward her. “Algerian. Black tobacco of the Foreign Legion. Probably it’s too strong for you. I have nothing else with me.”
 
The woman shook her head and took a cigarette. Ravic held the burning match for her. She smoked hastily, inhaling deeply. Ravic threw the match over the railing. It fell through the dark like a little shooting star and went out only when it reached the water.
 
A taxi drove slowly across the bridge. The driver stopped. He looked toward them and waited for a moment, then he stepped on the accelerator and drove along the wet dark-gleaming Avenue George V.
 
Ravic felt suddenly tired. He had been working all day and had not been able to sleep. And so he had gone out again to drink. But now, unexpectedly, in the wet coolness of the late night, tiredness fell over him like a sack.
 
He looked at the woman. What had made him stop her? Something was wrong with her, that much was clear. But what did it matter to him? He had already seen plenty of women with whom something was wrong, particularly at night, particularly in Paris, and it made no difference to him now and all he wanted was a few hours’ sleep.
 
“Go home,” he said. “What are you doing on the streets at this hour? You’ll only get into trouble.”
 
He turned up the collar of his coat and was about to walk away. The woman looked at him as though she did not understand. “Home?” she repeated.
 
Ravic shrugged his shoulders. “Home, back to your apartment, to your hotel, call it what you like, somewhere. You don’t want to be picked up by the police?”
 
“To the hotel! My God!” the woman said.
 
Ravic paused. Once more someone who does not know where to go, he thought. He could have foreseen it. It was always the same. At night they did not know where to go and the next morning they were gone before you were awake. Then they knew where to go. The old cheap desperation that came with the dark and left with it. He threw his cigarette away. As if he himself did not know it and know it to the point of weariness!
 
“Come, let’s go somewhere and have a drink,” he said.
 
It was the simplest solution. Afterwards he could pay and leave and she could decide what to do.
 
The woman made an uncertain movement and stumbled. Ravic caught hold of her arm. “Tired?” he asked.
 
“I don’t know. I guess so.”
 
“Too tired to sleep?”
 
She nodded.
 
“That can happen. Come along, I’ll hold onto you.”
 
They walked up the Avenue Marceau. Ravic felt the woman leaning on him. She did not lean as if she were tired—she leaned as if she were about to fall and had to support herself.
 
They crossed the Avenue Pierre Ierde Serbie. Behind the intersection of the Rue de Chaillot the street opened up and, floating and dark in the distance, the mass of the Arc de Triomphe emerged out of the rainy sky.
 
Ravic pointed to the narrow lighted entrance of a cellar drinking place. “In here—we’ll still be able to get something.”
 
It was a bistro frequented by drivers. A few cabdrivers and two whores were sitting inside. The drivers were playing cards. The whores were drinking absinthe. With a quick glance they took stock of the woman. Then they turned indifferently away. The older one yawned audibly; the other began lackadaisically making up her face. In the background a busboy, with the face of a weary rat, sprinkled sawdust around and began to sweep the floor. Ravic and the woman sat down at a table near the entrance. It was more convenient; he could then leave more easily. He did not remove his coat. “What do you want to drink?” he asked.
 
“I don’t know. Anything at all.”
 
“Two calvados,” Ravic said to the waiter, who was in vest and rolled-up shirtsleeves. “And a package of Chesterfields.”
 
“Haven’t any,” the waiter announced. “Only French.”
 
“Well then, a pack of Laurens green.”
 
“We don’t have green either. Only blue.”
 
Ravic looked at the waiter’s arm, on which was tattooed a naked woman walking on clouds. The waiter, following his glance, clenched his fist and made his muscles jump. The woman on the clouds wiggled her belly lasciviously.
 
“All right, blue,” Ravic said.
 
The waiter grinned. “Maybe we still have one green left.” He shuffled off.
 
Ravic’s eyes followed him. “Red slippers on his feet,” he said, “and a nautch girl on his arm! He must have served in the Turkish navy.”
 
The woman put her hands on the table. She did it as if she never wanted to lift them again. Her hands had been well cared for but that meant nothing. Still they were not too well cared for. Ravic saw that the nail of the right middle finger was broken; it seemed to have been torn off without having been filed. In some places the polish was chipped.
 
The waiter brought the glasses and a package of cigarettes.
 
“Laurens green. Found one after all.”
 
“I thought you would. Were you in the navy?”
 
“No. Circus.”
 
“Better still.” Ravic handed a glass to the woman. “Here, drink this. It’s the best thing at this hour. Or would you like coffee?”
 
“No.”
 
“Drink it all at once.”
 
The woman nodded and emptied the glass. Ravic studied her. She had a colorless face, almost without expression. The mouth was full but pale, the contours appeared blurred. Only the hair was very beautiful—of a lustrous natural blond. She wore a Basque beret and under her raincoat a blue tailored suit. The suit had been made by a good tailor, but the green stone in the ring on her hand was much too big to be real.
 
“Do you want another?” Ravic asked.
 
She nodded.
 
He beckoned the waiter. “Two more calvados. But bigger glasses.”
 
“Bigger glasses? More in them, too?”
 
“Yes.”
 
“That would be two double calvados.”
 
“You’ve guessed it.”
 
Ravic decided to finish his drink quickly and leave. He was bored and very tired. Generally he was patient with such incidents; he had more than forty years of eventful living behind him. But he was only too well acquainted with situations like this.
 
He had lived in Paris for a number of years and not been able to sleep much at night—then one saw a lot on the way.
 
The waiter brought the drinks. Ravic took the penetrating and aromatic smelling apple brandy and placed it carefully in front of the woman. “Drink this too. It doesn’t help much, but it warms you up. And whatever’s the matter—don’t take it too hard. There’s nothing that remains serious for long.”
 
The woman looked at him. She did not drink.
 
“It’s true,” Ravic said. “Particularly at night. Night exaggerates.”
 
The woman still stared at him. “You don’t have to comfort me,” she said.
 
“All the better.”
 
Ravic looked around for the waiter. He had had enough. He knew this type. Probably Russian, he thought. The minute they sit down somewhere, while they’re still wet, they become arrogant.
 
“Are you Russian?” he asked.
 
“No.”
 
Ravic paid and rose to say goodbye. At the same moment the woman got up, too. She did it silently and naturally. Ravic looked at her uncertainly. All right, he thought then, I can do it just as well outside.
 
It had begun to rain. Ravic stopped in front of the door. “Which way are you going?” He was determined to take the opposite direction.
 
“I don’t know. Somewhere.”
 
“But—where do you live?”
 
The woman made a quick movement. “I can’t go there! No, no! I can’t do that! Not there!”
 
Suddenly her eyes were full of a wild fear. She has quarreled, Ravic thought, has had some sort of row and has run away. By tomorrow noon she will have thought it over and will go back.
“Don’t you know anyone to whom you could go? An acquaintance? You could call them up from the bistro.”
 

Author

ERICH MARIA REMARQUE was born in Germany in 1898 and drafted into the German army during World War I. His novel All Quiet on the Western Front was published in 1928 and was an instant best seller. When the Nazis came to power, Remarque left Germany for Switzerland; he lost his German citizenship, his books were burned, and his films banned. He went to the United States in 1938 and became a citizen in 1947. He later lived in Switzerland with his second wife, the actress Paulette Goddard. He died in September 1970. View titles by Erich Maria Remarque