Sebald, a German who wrote in German even as he lived and taught in England, was preoccupied with Europe&mdashwith its literature, its wars, its cities, and above all, its history. He perceived the past not as a time dead and gone, but as a residue that covers the present, a snow that has settled over Europe&rsquos buildings, its landscapes, and the consciousness of its people. For Sebald, the great suffering unleashed upon humankind by the colonizing nations, and upon Europe itself by the Nazi enterprise, has yet to disappear. Europeans live in the aftermath, among the ruins of this accumulation of suffering. By Sebald&rsquos own account, the impress of even the most cataclysmic historical events eventually fades, but the effects of colonialism and the two world wars are still discernible to him, still constitutive of European reality as he experiences it. It is a startling thing for a reader in the post-colony, to have this glimpse into the heart of empire and find it as ravaged by its quest for power as it left many parts of the world, not least our own.