Berlin at war
(Book)
943.155 MOORH
1 available
Copies
Location | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Central - Adult Nonfiction | 943.155 MOORH | Available |
Description
In Berlin at War, historian Roger Moorhouse uses diaries, memoirs, and interviews to provide a searing first-hand account of life and death in the Nazi capital?the privations, the hopes and fears, and the nonconformist tradition that saw some Berliners provide underground succour to the city’s remaining Jews. Combining comprehensive research with gripping narrative, Berlin at War is the incredible story of the city?and people?that saw the whole of World War Two.
More Details
Notes
Table of Contents
Similar Titles From NoveList
Similar Authors From NoveList
Published Reviews
Choice Review
Key themes in this close study of the ways in which Berlin's political and military activities affected everyday life during WW II include the changing attitudes of Berliners toward the war, their frustration at wartime measures, and the technology used not only in the Holocaust, but also for home entertainment. Moorhouse combines the chronology of the war with thematic chapters based on extensive archival, oral history, and secondary sources. In focusing on new questions about everyday German lives, the author joins recent scholarship on the Third Reich that seeks to understand Nazism by examining the people who lived under and with Nazism. The book thus complements Peter Fritzsche's Life and Death in the Third Reich (CH, Feb'09, 46-3479), Monica Black's Death in Berlin: From Weimar to Divided Germany (2010), and editor Robert Moeller's The Nazi State and German Society: A Brief History with Documents (2010). Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. B. Blessing University Massachusetts-Amherst
Booklist Review
Election results in the fading days of the Weimar Republic indicate that Berliners were not particularly sympathetic to Hitler or his movement. Yet Berlin endured horrible physical destruction, deprivation, and death. This included intense Allied bombings by day and night, and a siege and eventual ravaging by the Russian army. Moorhouse, who has written extensively on the history of the Third Reich, succeeds in conveying the rhythms and travails of the lives of ordinary Berliners as the assault on their city intensifies. He begins with an almost idyllic scene as huge crowds in Berlin witness the celebration of Hitler's birthday in April 1939; at the time, of course, Germany seemed to have achieved itsforeign-policy goals without firing a shot. As the fortunes of Germany and Berlin deteriorate, Moorhouse uses the testimonies of a variety of Berliners to describe some memorable scenes and struggles.This is a hard, unrelenting saga of the effects of total warfare on citizens just hoping to survive.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
British historian Moorhouse (Killing Hitler) puts a human face on the capital city of a Reich at war. In the summer of 1939, Berliners were optimistic and grateful to their f hrer for Germany's improving economy and political order-above all, the country was at peace. That was to change with the declaration of war on September 1. Efforts to maintain some sense of normality were overshadowed by the benchmarks of total war: blackouts, rationing, and beginning in 1940 the air raids that would leave Berlin in ruins. Foreign forced laborers poured in to work in military factories, as Jews boarded trains, headed for annihilation. A network of informers aided a ubiquitous Gestapo with "a veritable epidemic of denunciations" as "civic relations" in the city collapsed. At war's end Berlin became the Reich's final battleground as the Red Army paid back four years of atrocities with an orgy of looting and rape. Yet Berliners sustained a chip-on-the-shoulder independence. Despite Berliners' "soul-searching and recriminations" (barely touched on here), Moorhouse drily relates the irony that, after the devastation, the hope that had dominated prewar Berlin quickly regained the upper hand. 16 pages of b&w photos; 1 map. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Book Review
A superb addition to the social history of Nazi Germany.British historian Moorhouse (Killing Hitler: The Plots, The Assassins, and the Dictator Who Cheated Death, 2006, etc.) begins with a vivid description of Berlin in April 1939, as the city celebrated Hitler's 50th birthday, a massive, elaborately choreographed festivity featuring a five-hour military parade during which Hitler mostly remained standing. The author then jumps ahead to Germany's invasion of Poland, an announcement greeted with no enthusiasm whatsoever from Berliners who remembered the terrible privations of 1914'18. Using interviews, letters, journals, memoirs and archives, the author provides an absorbing account of daily life, as Berliners were less concerned about the Reich's glories than the fate of their men at the front and preoccupied by shortages of fuel, food and clothes. Bombing raids began in 1940, producing little damage but serious morale problems as working Berliners complained bitterly of sleepless nights in bomb shelters. They paid little attention to nearly 500,000 foreign laborers who worked under conditions varying from tolerable to those of concentration-camp inmates (who also worked in the city). A few showed concern for the Jews, but readers will squirm as Moorhouse recounts how they were harassed, starved, robbed, ejected from their apartments and finally marched off to be killed. Other disturbing chapters recount the story of Berlin's anti-Nazi opposition (generally disastrous), the trials of Jews who tried to escape deportation by going underground (some succeeded) and the increasing deterioration of city life after 1943 as bombing intensified.An august contribution to the city-during-a-war genre, worthy to sit alongside such classics as Margaret Leech's Reveille in Washington (1941) and Ernest Furgurson's Ashes of Glory (1996).]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
"Election results in the fading days of the Weimar Republic indicate that Berliners were not particularly sympathetic to Hitler or his movement. Yet Berlin endured horrible physical destruction, deprivation, and death. This included intense Allied bombings by day and night, and a siege and eventual ravaging by the Russian army. Moorhouse, who has written extensively on the history of the Third Reich, succeeds in conveying the rhythms and travails of the lives of ordinary Berliners as the assault on their city intensifies. He begins with an almost idyllic scene as huge crowds in Berlin witness the celebration of Hitler's birthday in April 1939; at the time, of course, Germany seemed to have achieved itsforeign-policy goals without firing a shot. As the fortunes of Germany and Berlin deteriorate, Moorhouse uses the testimonies of a variety of Berliners to describe some memorable scenes and struggles.This is a hard, unrelenting saga of the effects of total warfare on citizens just hoping to survive." Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
British historian Moorhouse (Killing Hitler) puts a human face on the capital city of a Reich at war. In the summer of 1939, Berliners were optimistic and grateful to their führer for Germany's improving economy and political order--above all, the country was at peace. That was to change with the declaration of war on September 1. Efforts to maintain some sense of normality were overshadowed by the benchmarks of total war: blackouts, rationing, and beginning in 1940 the air raids that would leave Berlin in ruins. Foreign forced laborers poured in to work in military factories, as Jews boarded trains, headed for annihilation. A network of informers aided a ubiquitous Gestapo with "a veritable epidemic of denunciations" as "civic relations" in the city collapsed. At war's end Berlin became the Reich's final battleground as the Red Army paid back four years of atrocities with an orgy of looting and rape. Yet Berliners sustained a chip-on-the–shoulder independence. Despite Berliners' "soul-searching and recriminations" (barely touched on here), Moorhouse drily relates the irony that, after the devastation, the hope that had dominated prewar Berlin quickly regained the upper hand. 16 pages of b&w photos; 1 map. (Oct.)
[Page ]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Moorhouse, R. (2010). Berlin at war . Basic Books.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Moorhouse, Roger. 2010. Berlin At War. New York: Basic Books.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Moorhouse, Roger. Berlin At War New York: Basic Books, 2010.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Moorhouse, R. (2010). Berlin at war. New York: Basic Books.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Moorhouse, Roger. Berlin At War Basic Books, 2010.