The Good Comrade – Memoirs of an International Brigader

The Good Comrade – Memoirs of an International Brigader. Jan Kurzke :– ISBN: 978-01-913693-06-0

Published by- The Clapton Press

I am beginning  to run out of superlatives for Clapton Press, for this volume is divine.

These are the memoirs of Jan Kurzke, born in Hamburg in 1905, he was a talented artist, he fled the Nazi regime in 1933, eventually finding refuge in Spain where he ‘toured the country’, he travelled on to England where he met Kate Mangan  the married artist, actress, and journalist. After meeting Kurzke in 1934 she gained a divorce and then in 1936 traveled to Spain to look for Kurzke. Jan had joined the forming International Brigades and fought in the defence of Madrid, when he was wounded Kate nursed him and arranged for his evacuation from Spain. On their return to England they married.

What is really odd is that none of this wonderful love story is mentioned by Jan in his memoirs, as Richard Baxell explains in his detailed introduction, this was half of a wider memoir written with Kate Mangan, and her part of this dual memoir is published separately, also by The Clapton Press as Never More Alive .

A challenge to this publication is that Kurzke’s memoirs are fragmentary; his description of his  Spanish tour is left incomplete in 1934, just as he embarks on a new adventure, it  begins again with him reentering Spain to fight for the Spanish Republic in 1936, and again ends as he crosses the border once again, this time as a wounded soldier.

The reason for the discontinuous nature of the memoir is made clear both by Richard in his introduction and in the two Appendixes. Put simply this is all that remains. I think it is a brave decision to publish what appears to be an incomplete account.

In my opinion this decision is fully justified and is one we should be thankful for, as we have this fantastic account to relish, this is because the prose is beautiful and the narrative compelling, it is a joy to read; in fact a number of times I stopped reading the narrative to go back and reread a passage simply to enjoy the phrasing of the prose; and one must remember this is written in his second language.

Richard Baxell provides a detailed introduction, which at first I felt was a real spoiler; he details what Jan does and sees, explaining what happens prior to and post his first visit to Spain and gives us the point in which the narrative cuts off. Richard talks about Kate Mangan and her search for Jan, and how she finds him in a hospital awaiting the amputation of his leg, how she manages to avert the procedure and eventually takes him to safety.

If you think, as I did, that there would be no surprises left, that Richard had summarised Jan’s account, you will be wrong, very very wrong. The prose is so outstandingly well crafted and the detail so finely balanced you will find yourself rapidly absorbed into the story.

Jan gives us a glorious account of life  tramping round the southern parts of Spain, he provides witness to the debilitating  feudalistic poverty of the rural population,  his first-hand accounts of his encounters with fellow tramps and the Spanish peasantry are horrifically empathetic; the descriptions of the absolute deprivation need no accompanying elaboration.

The opening scenes as Jan prepares to tramp around Spain are deeply reminiscent of Orwell’s Road to Wigan Pier, but this account swiftly surpasses Orwell’s detached and observational account, for Jan is not merely playing a role for a few short months and then returning to his comfortable life,  gathering anecdotes and inspiration. We feel Jan Kurzke living the life of a tramp, we take the journey with him; he is literally penniless, he is barely surviving, barely keeping himself alive. This makes his accounts of the living conditions of the Spaniards he encounters so overwhelming, it is shocking to read his sympathy for the families he meets, as he realises that they are in a worse situation than him, at least he can escape the situation he finds himself in by moving on, or ceasing the struggle to  stay alive.

One really warms to Jan, his natural charm is manifest in the way he describes the people he meets and the relationships he develops. There are two significant relationships he develops whilst tramping, the first is with Hermann, the fellow German.

I struck the main road from whence I could see the town. A man was sitting in a ditch not far off and I  knew he was a German from the map he was studying. A Spanish tramp does not mind where he goes or what the distance is between one place and another, but Germans are more methodical. they always plan, or make one; they like to have an objective, they like to know the country they tramping through. i found it helped me a lot, especially when resting, and I studied the names of places and mountains, towns and villages, and i would pencil off roads already covered and measure the distance to the next town.

Implicit in the account of his time with Hermann is how Hermann mentored Jan, shared his experience, guided him, collaborated and trained Jan. It was a real wrench when Jan departs from Hermann. I feel that this partnership guides us through pre-war Spain, illuminating the conditions in Spain which demanded reform, but Jan does not preach, he does not analyse, he simply reports on what he has witnessed, and his  description of the impoverishment of the Spanish populace is more the powerful for his lack of judgement.

It is striking that despite the horrific hardship Jan witnesses and to some extent experiences is not morose or depressing, his prose is uplifting as well as enlightening, which makes the situations he describes even more enraging.

Jan departs from Herman to join a trio of entertainers, led by the German born photographer Walter Reuter, the others were Walter’s wife and the beautiful young blonde Margarethe Zembal, who Jan refers to as ‘Putz’ and who Jan clearly fell in love with, despite promising Walter he wouldn’t.

It is just as he begins his adventures with these three colourful characters that the memoirs come to an abrupt end. This is pretty jarring as the narrative is flowing so freely one feels very much like Wile Coyote as he runs off the edge of a cliff; we seem to continue on, until, after a delay, we find there is nothing there. Even with Richard’s warning it still comes as a disappointing shock, in fact I may even suggest that without the prior warning this halt in the story would be a killer. I think it is testimony to the editors skill that he feels he can highlight the gap in the narrative to openly, because pre-warned I felt eventually felt frustrated towards myself for forgetting the warning, rather than directing my frustration at anyone else who was depriving me of the continued pleasure of reading this fine narrative.

The opening scene in this second section has Jan travelling into Spain,  it feels much like an entirely  separate narrative, which indeed it is because two years have passed, and Jan is a different man; older, wiser, with more responsibilities. However the prior section means that we are familiar with this character, we have an insight into his thoughts and feelings, we know him. The wonderful prose is still there but this time it is  not so light, it is much more descriptive, reflecting the subject matter, although Jan has lost none of his warmth and humanity.

I found the  second section rewarding for different reasons to the first section; I am much more familiar with the context of the narrative, for this is the period which covers the events to which I have already studied whilst researching  David Marshall and reading, another Clapton Press publication, Boadilla by Esmond Romilly .

Jan Kurzke’s account compliments these other accounts, he not only looks at some similar events from a different perspective, but the fact that Jan is not English means that he has different priorities, and dare I say it, different standards to the other two. It is notablr that Jan had some experience in firearms before Spain, and is therefore slightly more confident than the Englishmen when in the heat of battle. Jan had an advantage over most of his fellow British volunteers, as he was multilingual he could communicate much more easily.

One similarity which seems to reflect the other two accounts is Jan’s easy familiarity with significant individuals, his friend John was the poet John Cornford, a legendary figure in the International Brigades. so too was Jock; who Jan says had a permanent look of puzzlement on his face. I’ll never look at a picture of Jock Cummingham, who led the British Battalion after Jarama, in the same way again, but of course Jan is writing about them before they gained recognition and notoriety. It would be John Cornford who would drag the wounded Jan to safety.

John Cornford

It is not the proximity to the great and the good, nor the association with the great events which makes this book so fantastic, it is the simplicity. Simon from Clapton Press is presenting a splintered narrative, an incomplete memoir, a flawed account; but this is what makes it so special, it has not been sanitised or developed by an historian, it has not been added to in order to clarify, we are left largely with mo0st of what Jan  Kurzke intended to leave us, and it is wonderful.

The account of his time in Hospital feels so authentic, with tiny changes in routine taking on monstrous dramatic significance simply because time is dragging for Jan, monotony prevails. Once again,  just as the reader feels comfortable with the flow of the narrative it ends abruptly.

It is at this abrupt end that Simon plays his trump card, Appendix one contains the correspondence between Charlotte Kurzke; the daughter of Jan and Kate Mangan, and Bernard Knox, the academic who had fought in the International Brigades alongside Cornford and Kurzke.

The exchange itself is fascinating as it highlights the difficulties and choices we face when using testimony; an account constructed after the events. We also see their frustration with Jan’s odd choices and omissions. It is shocking to find that Jan Kurzke does not mention Charlotte’s mother in his account; one disquieting omission comes when the lovers, Jan and Kate are reunited in Barcelona, Jan replaces this event in his memoir with a description of him bedding a girl he met in a bar. Neither Charlotte nor Bernard can explain this void in the narrative, the reader too can speculate but there seems to be no satisfactory explanation.

The second appendix comes from Simon Deefholts, the CEO of The Calpton Press, in which he adds context and attempts to explain the end of the Story, where Jan abandons Kate and Charlotte to begin a new life. As with the first Appendix, this is not done to explain the situation, but to present information, allowing the reader to draw their own conclusions. Simon is treating us like adults, who can weigh up the evidence, speculate and develop hypothesis of our own.

Put simply Simon has presented a number of parts, which don’t quite fit neatly together and certainly don’t make up a complete whole. I feels he has brought to our notice a fantastic account of Spain prior to the outbreak of the Spanish war, and a valuable account of the initial stages of that war, he has shown us what a fine writer Jan Kurzke was and the work his daughter has put in to bring it to the notice of the public. I believe this is an exceptional work of historical importance; we have an eye-witness account of life in Spain before the war, by an a gifted writer, combined with an account of the defence of Madrid which corroborates some of the most significant accounts in the English language.

If you want to read fine prose, you should read this book, if you want to get an impression of Spain before the outbreak of war, giving you an insight into why it broke out then you should read this book. If you want to read an interesting narrative, you should read this book. If you have an interest in the first few months of the Spanish Civil war you should read this book. If you have an interest in the construction of history then this book  will be a useful read. In short there are multiple reasons for getting hold of this publication, but primarily the major reason is that it is outstandingly good.

The book can be purchased from Clapton Press – here

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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