A gorgeously jacketed hardcover anthology of classic stories set in Berlin, by an international array of brilliant writers.
Spanning more than a century, this collection of stories reflects Berlin's rich and turbulent history, chronicling the creative ferment of the Weimar Republic, the devastation of wartime, the cruel divisions of the Berlin Wall, and the aftermath of reunification. Classics by Theodor Fontane and Robert Walser provide a window on privileged society at the turn of the century. Alfred D�blin, Erich Kastner, Vladimir Nabokov, and Christopher Isherwood illuminate the frenetic Golden Twenties and the ruinous crash that followed, while marginal youths roam the city's seamy underside in Irmgard Keun's The Artificial Silk Girl and Ernst Haffner's Blood Brothers. The hero of Thomas Wolfe's You Can't Go Home Again visits a city shadowed by Hitler's rise, while in Hans Fallada's Alone in Berlin a working-class couple quietly resists the Nazis. Cold War espionage enlivens works by Len Deighton and Ian McEwan; Christa Wolf's They Divided the Sky and Peter Schneider's The Wall Jumper depict the Berlin Wall's impact on a personal scale; and Thomas Brussig's Stasi officers engage in meaningless surveillance in Heroes Like Us. G�nter Grass shows us German reunification through the eyes of an elderly Luftwaffe veteran while Uwe Timm does so through a writer's madcap wanderings in a bewildering post-Wall landscape. Finally, more recent arrivals--from Chloe Aridjis's Mexican-Jewish university student in Book of Clouds to the desperate African refugees in Jenny Erpenbeck's Go, Went, Gone--bear witness to Berlin's continuing evolution as an arena of the possible.
Hensher was born in South London, although he spent the majority of his childhood and adolescence in Sheffield, attending Tapton School.[2] He did his undergraduate degree at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford before attending Cambridge, where he was awarded a PhD for work on 18th century painting and satire. Early in his career he worked as a clerk in the House of Commons, from which he was fired over the content of an interview he gave to a gay magazine.[1] He has published a number of novels, is a regular contributor, columnist and book reviewer for newspapers and weeklies such as The Guardian, The Spectator , The Mail on Sunday and The Independent. The Bedroom of the Mister’s Wife (1999) brings together 14 of his stories, including ‘Dead Languages’, which A. S. Byatt selected for her Oxford Book of English Short Stories (1998), making Hensher the youngest author included in the anthology.http://literature.britishcouncil.org/... Since 2005 he has taught creative writing at the University of Exeter. He has edited new editions of numerous classic works of English Literature, such as those by Charles Dickens and Nancy Mitford, and Hensher served as a judge for the Booker Prize. From 2013 he will hold the post of Professor of Creative Writing at Bath Spa University.[3] Since 2000, Philip Hensher has been listed as one of the 100 most influential LGBT people in Britain,[4] and in 2003 as one of Granta's twenty Best of Young British Novelists.[1] In 2008, Hensher's semi-autobiographical novel The Northern Clemency was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. In 2012, Hensher won first prize -German Travel Writers Award, and is shortlisted for the Green Carnation Prize. He also won the Stonewall Prize for the Journalist of the Year in 2007 and The Somerset Maugham Award for his novel Kitchen Venom in 1996. He wrote the libretto for Thomas Adès' 1995 opera Powder Her Face. This has been his only musical collaboration to date. His early writings have been characterized as having an "ironic, knowing distance from their characters" and "icily precise skewerings of pretension and hypocrisy"[1] His historical novel The Mulberry Empire "echos with the rhythm and language of folk tales" while "play[ing] games" with narrative forms.[1] He is married to Zaved Mahmood, a human rights lawyer at the United Nations.
The short stories in this collection were well done and interesting for the most part. But inexplicably the editor included numerous chapters taken from novels which were nearly impossible to make sense of beyond a mood of danger and intrigue. Rather disappointing.
Certain chapters are better than others of course, but overall a wonderful introduction into the world of literature set in Berlin. I appreciate the span of time and subject the stories cover. Great read.
A collection of short stories and excerpts from works about or that takes place in the German city of Berlin. Like most collections of short stories, some are better than others, but overall I enjoyed these. Stories in this collection are:
Excerpt from "Effi Briest" by Theodor Fontane The Little Berliner by Robert Walser From "Berlin Alexanderplatz" by Alfred Döblin From "King, Queen, Knave" by Vladimir Nabokov From "Going to the Dogs" by Erich Kästner From "Blood Brothers" by Ernst Haffner From "The Artificial Silk Girl" by Irmgard Keun A Berlin Diary: Winter 1932-3 by Christopher Isherwood The Dark Messiah by Thomas Wolfe From "Alone in Berlin" by Hans Fallada Berlin, April 1945 by Heinz Rein From "The Wall Jumper" by Peter Schneider From "Heroes Like Us" by Thomas Brussig From "Funeral in Berlin" by Len Deighton From "They Divided the Sky" by Christa Wolf From "The Innocent" by Ian McEwan The Diving Duck by Günter Grass Business Camouflage by Wladimir Kaminer From "Bookd of Clouds" by Chloe Aridjis The Reichstag, Wrapped by Uwe Timm Berlin Arkonaplatz - My Lesbian Summer by Kevin Barry From "Television" by Jean-Philippe Toussaint From "Go, Went, Gone" by Jenny Erpenbeck
I really liked this. It is a collection of excerpts from longer works by various writers, all of whom are talented. The collection is diverse in the writing styles and also the eras in which they were written. The only common thread is that the setting is Berlin.
Of all the places I’ve never been, Berlin is probably the one I’d most like to visit. As such, I really enjoyed this collection of, essentially, snapshots of the city from various periods of literature written about it.
Even though it’s not a collection of essays and not quite a collection of short stories, I felt the same way I usually feel when reading those - I really liked some, some were just fine, and some didn’t work for or appeal to me. And there’s - probably unsurprisingly - a strong undercurrent of melancholy running through these, especially as the stories approached present day. Still, place/scene/setting/atmosphere/whatever you want to call it is my favorite thing to read in literature, and ultimately I found this a compelling collection that made me even more strongly desire a visit to Berlin.