I enjoyed this book about Eastern Europe, post-Communism. The author, Eva Hoffman, visited Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria in 1990 and then again in 1991, and this book is her travel memories and her impressions of the political, economic, and social changes occurring then at breakneck pace.
The book really improved as the author moved away from the familiar (Poland, where she grew up, and to a lesser extent, Czechoslovakia) and into unknown territory. I felt the part about the Poles in particular was much less sharply observed, which is understandable since Ms. Hoffman is more closely attached to Poland and Polish history. I was also disappointed that nearly everyone she interviewed in Poland was either a literary luminary and/or a newly minted politician. I wanted to know more about ordinary people. But again, this focus on the intelligentsia bothered me less as she moved further from her comfort zone. The adventures and observations from Romania and Bulgaria were particularly fascinating, and I was very interested to learn more about those parts of the world.