50 pages • 1 hour read
Jennifer A. NielsenA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Felix Baum is a 12-year-old Austrian Jewish boy who is accompanying his father, Josef Baum, on a business trip in Sarajevo, on June 28, 1914. They witness Archduke Franz Ferdinand parade through the streets in his car, and Felix feels uneasy about the unhappy-looking crowds. His father explains to him that the Bosnians are resentful about being conquered by the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As they talk, a man throws a grenade into the archduke’s car, but the archduke knocks it away, and it explodes on the car behind. Felix is shocked and his father, a former soldier, goes to help the wounded. Later, while Josef buys his son some pastries to cheer him up, the archduke’s car appears again. This time, a man walks directly up to it and shoots the archduke. After the commotion, Felix and Josef decide to catch a train home.
Felix is back at home in the then-Austrian city of Lemberg, where he lives with his parents. The Baums are hosting the Dresslers, a German family, for dinner. Herr Dressler is a major in the German army, and his daughter Elsa is a talkative 12-year-old who tries to befriend Felix. Felix, however, prefers to stay with the adults and talk about the possible upcoming war, which he is very worried about.
By Jennifer A. Nielsen