
1913 Kurt Wolff Verlag • Leipzig
A sixteen‑year‑old boy arrives in New York, having been sent from his impoverished German home after a scandal that forced him onto a ship bound for America. The towering Statue of Liberty gleams in a sudden burst of sunlight, filling him with awe and a sense of fresh possibility as the bustling crowd of passengers pushes him toward the gangway. Yet the excitement quickly turns into bewilderment when, in the cramped lower decks, he loses his umbrella and becomes lost among a maze of narrow corridors and stairways.
In his frantic search he stumbles into a dimly lit cabin where a hulking stranger is obsessively fiddling with a small suitcase. The man, wary of intruders, offers the boy a place to rest while demanding answers about his missing luggage. Their uneasy conversation hints at the stranger’s own guarded secrets and sets the stage for the young immigrant’s struggle to find his footing in an unfamiliar world.
Language
de
Duration
~1 hours (65K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Markus Brenner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2005-07-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1883–1924
Best known for turning ordinary life into something unsettling and unforgettable, this Prague-born writer helped define the modern sense of anxiety, alienation, and absurdity. His stories still feel startlingly fresh, whether he is writing about a man who wakes up as an insect or a hero trapped in a maze of invisible rules.
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