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I can't figure out if "Herr Lehmann" felt more like a collection of short stories with a central chronology or a novel without aim. It definitely is exploratory and brings one close to the characters. Yet, it didn't seem like it went anywhere or that people fundamentally changed. Frank Lehmann, the main character, had all the makings of a man ready for literary and fundamental change. While always denying he wanted change or ambition, he was intelligent, a natural leader among peers, did try to establish a meaningful relationship, and was offered a management position at his bar. Throw in the collapse of the Berlin Wall as a culminating event in the setting, the reader is prepped for a book about change and forward progress. But at the end of the book, we find the wall coming down was an anticlimax as a plot device and that life went on rather normally… with Herr Lehmann remaining the same. Maybe that was the point…