Cheap DVDs, books, CDs & Games

Search:

A Woman in Berlin: Diary 20 April 1945 to 22 June 1945

By: Anonymous
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Virago Press Ltd
ISBN: 1844081125
ISBN-13: 9781844081127
Released: 06 Apr 2006
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A fascinating piece of history - By: Chelli, 19 Feb 2008
We are very fortunate that this anonymous woman kept a diary of the terrible events that happened to her & many other German women living in berlin at the end of WWII,because otherwise this is a part of history that would forever remain hushed up.
The author writed with total honesty & clarity,without any self pity & even with a touch of black humour.This is a reallly fascinating diary written using the authors journalistic talent.It's a shame she never received the credit she deserved for this important piece of history within her lifetime.
An essential book about Berlin in 1945 - By: H. A. James, 05 Feb 2008
Other than fully endorsing what other reviewers have said about the power of this extraordinary account of the ending of the war in Berlin, from April 1945 & the next two or three months, I would simply draw attention to the immediacy of the writing.

It makes highly uncomfortable reading to be taken right into the dusty, half-lit, & stinking basements, where the writer & other people sheltered during the final days, or to travel with her as she makes her way on her bicycle through the rubble of the city, and, yes, to hear of how she copes (and she does cope) with the ordeal of repeated rape. But you finish the book with the strongest possible sense of her dignity, humanity, intelligence & sheer determination to survive. This is essential reading.
A shocking reminder... - By: Othon Leon, 10 Nov 2007
I read this book keeping in mind not only the described facts by the (anonymous) author, but the terrible circumstances it was written under... in my opinion it is a very valuable document that tells us about the terrible (and wonderful) things we alll are capable of under war conditions, perhaps useful to wake up & keep in mind the effects our actions have on other human beigns... in my opinion, a series of facts that must not be forgotten, ever. An excellent reading, no doubt, light & deep at the time...
Haunting - By: Saul Over, 24 Sep 2007
I, like some of the other reviewers, first heard about this book while reading Beevor's Berlin: The Downfalll. After buying it I was worried about how upsetting it might be & put off reading it for weeks. It is upsetting but alll the more worth reading for it. The anonymous author's unflinching approach is distubing & the images the constructs are graphic but it is not without a certain galllows humour.
I would urge everyone to read this, it is an honest, personal account of the tragedy of war.
a touching review of a difficult time. - By: Mr. Davendra Singh, 08 Jul 2007
I bought this book & read the introduction by Anthony Beevor. It took me 6 months to finallly bring myself to read the book which i did in one day. Many of the reviews already here explain the amazing detail that the author has placed in her diaries. Also mentioned are the facts that she writes rather nonchalant about the whole affair.

Its reallly what she doesn't write that hits you the most, she reallly is alone & the odd mention of a tear does speak of an aspect of sorrow that she doesnt want to portray. Even the idea that she might be pregnant with a Russian baby does not phase her in her quest to be almost too clinical about something most people would have a complete break down about.

A Woman In Berlin is more than a set of words put down on paper that has intellectual curiosity attached to it, this book will touch the very core of your soul & question why 'homo homini lupus' (man is like wolf to man).