Berlin

A Literary Guide for Travellers

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Pub Date Nov 24 2016 | Archive Date Aug 31 2016

Description

An alternative guide for those looking for the literary heart of Berlin.

Located at the centre of the ever-changing politics of Europe, Berlin has a rich literary and creative history: from the socialist literary salons of 18th century Prussia and the rise of Expressionism in the 20th century to the explosion of creativity during the Weimar period and those who captured life on both sides of the divided city after the Second World War.

Written by local experts, this new guide offers travellers a glimpse into the compelling body of literature on Berlin, charting the bars, cafes and neighbourhoods in which much of it was created. Here travellers will discover the pub where Joseph Roth wrote The Radetzky March just a year before he left Berlin on the day that Adolf Hitler was elected Chancellor, and the apartment where Nabokov spent some of the most productive years of his career. The authors also chart the up-and-coming neighbourhoods that are enticing writers and artists from all over the world today.

An alternative guide for those looking for the literary heart of Berlin.

Located at the centre of the ever-changing politics of Europe, Berlin has a rich literary and creative history: from the...


A Note From the Publisher

I.B.Tauris Literary Guides for Travellers were recently voted among the 24 best indie travel guides by FATHOM.

Also in the series:
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I.B.Tauris Literary Guides for Travellers were recently voted among the 24 best indie travel guides by FATHOM.

Also in the series:
Sicily
Florence and Tuscany
Tangier
Venice
Scotland
The...


Advance Praise

‘A rich and learned companion for every lover of Berlin; bursting with anecdote and alive with history. A must.’
- Rory MacLean, author of Berlin: Imagine a City

‘A rich and learned companion for every lover of Berlin; bursting with anecdote and alive with history. A must.’
- Rory MacLean, author of Berlin: Imagine a City


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781784536428
PRICE $30.00 (USD)

Average rating from 5 members


Featured Reviews

I have lived in Berlin since 2010 and I have learned a lot of interesting and funny and also sad things on my actual city after reading this book! I just suggest not to read it all together but maybe a chapter at a time, to savor it better.

Vivo a Berlino dalla fine del 2010 e nonostante credevo di sapere parecchie cose, ne ho imparate molte altre, sia belle che brutte che divertenti, scritte in questo libro. Unico suggerimento che mi sento di dare é quello di non leggerlo tutto assieme, ma un capitolo per volta, in modo da assaporarlo meglio.

THANKS TO NETGALLEY AND I.B.TAURIS FOR THE PREVIEW!

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Exactly what it says it is – a literary guide to Berlin. Comprehensive, with many anecdotes, and a wealth of suggestions for reading about Berlin, this is the ideal book for any booklover who intends to visit the city, or even just to be an armchair traveller there. Just my sort of book.

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Thanks to NetGalley and to I.B.Tauris for offering me an ARC copy of this book that I voluntarily choose to review.
This is a book that does what it says on the tin, and much more. The authors share a great wealth of research that they divide by neighbourhoods, not only of the writers born in Berlin but also of those who emigrated to the city or visited and produced some significant piece of work inspired by their stay or travels. Providing a detailed historical background into the birth and development of the city, it also describes the most important buildings in each area, and their significance to culture, be it official culture or underground and resistance.
The book contains brief biographies of the authors it discusses, from the Grimm Brothers, Mark Twain, David Bowie and Iggy Pop, to writers published within the last five years. It illustrates the city with quotes and extracts from a variety of works, from poems, songs, novels… I’ve personally discovered fascinating stories of parks housing suicidal literary lovers, of breweries that became hubbubs of culture and neighbourhood life through the centuries, of resistance on both sides of the wall, of writers who continued to create no matter how dire their circumstances, of heroics and controversies, and of a city that has suffered and endured as much as its citizens. Destroyed and rebuilt, fragmented and reunited, it has provided fertile ground for literature and artistic creation through its history and this guide offers the reader a taster that is sure to encourage further exploration.
I haven’t visited Berlin personally, but I finished the book with an urgency to go, and with the feeling that anybody who visits Berlin taking this guide with them will see it through a myriad of perspectives and live an unforgettable experience.
I hope to read more of these literary guides and to be able to take them with me on future trips. Highly recommended to lovers of travel and literature alike.

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