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GERMANY BOOKS
Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by George Wood. By Hunter Pub Inc.
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2 comments about Visitor's Guide to Germany : Black Forest.
- Acknowledged as among the most reliable and useful guides for sightseers. With maps and full color photos throughout, this Visitor's Guide is highly detailed, giving you the information you need to get the most from your trip. It serves as a useful reference tool before you leave home, and is the perfect travel companion while on the road. Area-by-area tours highlight in-town sights and attractions, including art galleries, museums, historic buildings and churches. They also lead you out into the countryside, with recommended stops en route. Chapters reveal tidbits of the area's local culture, interesting sidelights on how the landscape has been shaped and other details sorely lacking in other guidebooks.
- Written with the motorist and independent traveler in mind. Carefully chosen itineraries guide you to historic towns and villages, beauty spots and some lesser-known areas. Distinctive page symbols point out the information you need. Useful information gives opening times, transport, currency, accomodation and much more. Color photographs capture the true essence of this fascinating region.
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Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by M. Schulte-Kellinghouse and E. Speigelhalter and A. Meisen. By Sturtz.
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No comments about Journey Through The Black Forest.
Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Cartographia. By Cartographia.
The regular list price is $10.95.
Sells new for $9.85.
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1 comments about Germany Map (Country Map).
- Save your money. I was disappointed with this map. It is hard to read and after making my trip, I found that many of the roads I needed had different numbers than those on the map. I'm not sure how to explain that, but the map was not all that helpful. I will try a different series next time.
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Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Charles Nevin. By Mainstream Publishing.
The regular list price is $27.50.
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1 comments about Lancashire, Where Women Die of Love.
- If you're from the Northwest of England, this is a must read! Brings back wonderful memories.
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Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Michael Gorra. By Princeton University Press.
The regular list price is $19.95.
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5 comments about The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany.
- Nobody writes travelogues about Germany," writes Michael Gorra at the beginning of his book "The Bells in their Silence: Travels through Germany." Indeed Germany has, in recent years, failed to inspire travel writing as sophisticated as that of Jan Morris or as candidly humorous as that Bill Bryson, a fact that makes Gorra's book a welcome addition to the genre. But after making such a statement, Gorra acknowledges the many writers who have travelled Germany before him, those who tried to makes sense of the country by seeking the marrow of the German culture beyond Lederhosen and the occasional oompah band.
A book that itself sometimes lingers too long in the past, "The Bells in their Silence" is an erudite rendering of the year the author spent living and travelling with his wife in the port city Hamburg and across northern and eastern Germany. Not a professed Germanophile, Gorra's distanced approach to Germany as well as his initial mistrust of the possibility of writing a travel book about the country are grounded in his understanding that travel writing itself is for amateurs seeking impression - and that those who choose to write about Germany are journalists. But once he gets past this initial barrier, Gorra has a keen eye, one that is guided by the extensive reading he did to prepare himself for his journey. When the author isn't bemusing cultural differences and delighting in the small moments of daily life, he takes his reader on a literary tour of Germany from Goethe through Fontane and Thomas Mann. An English professor at Smith College, Gorra is a frequent reviewer for the New York Times Book Review. He is a traveller whose understanding of people and place is indebted to literature. Weimar can only be understood through Goethe - and the commercialization of the 19th century renaissance man that bloomed when the city was Europe's cultural capital in 1999. The Berlin that fascinates Gorra is colored by Theodor Fontane's Prussian Berlin, before, as historian Michael Wise writes, the "country's past rendered patriotism suspect." Towards the end of the book, his most touching and personal chapter concludes with a glimpse into the place that Thomas Mann's family saga "Buddenbrooks" has held in his life. As a cultural investigator, Gorra is at his best in a chapter called "Hauptstadt," in which he dissects the peculiarities of the German capital. "Take the subway," he writes, "and mole your way beneath the city, dropping down into darkness and popping up again in a street that doesn't match the one you left behind, into rain you didn't know was happening, a view that seems suddenly all park, or all slum." When writing about Berlin's "big footprint," Gorra must have recognized that like Christopher Isherwood in the 1920's - whose "Berlin Stories" inspired the film "Cabaret" - he was viewing a city in full transition. He visited the German capital in 1993 and then again in the late 1990's, a brief few years that saw Berlin's Mitte district rise up as a cultural hotspot and when the city's edginess began to draw the country's artists to its empty factories and abandoned apartment complexes. An appendix to the book - including works both literary and historical - is without a doubt one of the greatest boons of the book, for Gorra has selected a way to approach Germany without having to speak German. And it is appropriate that he chooses to settle into his daily rhythms in the very areas that are less often known to attract tourists seeking old world charm, cities that were left mere shells and rebuilt in a new aesthetic after the Second World War, cities that bare their scars openly but not proudly. Gorra seeks out those old wounds and dissects what they may mean for Germans and visitors to Germany today. But if Gorra often falls into the same questioning that has defined the "German problem" for over half a century, he also displays a profound sympathy for the German people and the burden they carry as the children and grandchildren of Nazi Germany. The title he chose for his book doesn't come into play until the last chapter, when he visits Luebeck's Marienkirche, where a pair of bells lay destroyed in a courtyard as a testament to the tragedy of war. "But what, exactly, does it remember?" he asks. "Does is commemorate what Luebeck itself suffered, or does it mark the suffering of war in general? Does it tell the city that "this was done to us by them," or does it perhaps declare that "this is what we brought upon ourselves?" ... maybe it simply says that these particular and much-loved bells used to ring, and now can't." These lines are among the last resounding notes in an excellent investigation of Germany that might have been more colorful with more anecdotal insight into the Germans he met.
- Michael Gorra notes that Germany's recent history causes certain stumbling blocks when writing literary fiction about modern Germany. Though he clears the barrier in his own travelouge, it sometimes feels like he is trying too hard to be erudite. Quoting everyone from Goethe to Bill Bryson gives the impression of scholarly name dropping. Still, the book is at its best when relaying personal vignettes from his year in Germany, such as his reaction when a German customs agents accidentally discovers an embarassing book he imports to the country, and his first-hand experience with the efficient German health-care system.
- Michael Gorra, an American academic married to a Swiss academic, finds himself in Germany for a year. He's on sabbatical, so he doesn't have to go to work every day, but he needs something to show for his year off. This book is it.
Normally I wouldn't read something that seems so eggheady. But the New York Times gave it a good review and I was intrigued by Gorra's statement that no one travels in Germany for fun. So I skipped the parts on German literature and read about Gorra's adventures with the German language and the German people.
When Gorra talks about these everyday matters of travel and being in a different country, he is quite good. But when he goes off into literary discussions, he becomes the professor. Why is it that literature is interesting, but literary criticism always manages to squeeze every ounce of enjoyment out of a novel? I suppose it would be the same if you were to over-analyze a good joke.
In a surprising twist, Gorra also touches on travel writing in general, observing (but not over-analyzing) the writings of Patrick Leigh Fermor and Eric Newby to Paul Theroux and Bill Bryson.
The Bells in their Silence (which refers to the fallen bells of the Marienkirche in Luebeck) is mostly an enjoyable book on travel in modern Germany by an open-minded and curious writer.
- To call this book a travel book is really stretching the definition. I would more describe it as a collection of rambling unstructured snippets of other authors' accounts of travelling in Germany. It rarely puts these into historical context, or relates them to what you might find in modern Germany.
The author inserts a few annecdotes of his own travels to the Harz Mountains, Weimar and Berlin and a small account of his life in Hamburg.
There is little original material and insight into living in Germany, travelling in Germany and modern German attitudes to themselves, their history and their place in the world.
The prose is often convoluted and frequently pretentious, and the name-dropping of other authors becomes irksome after a chapter or two.
- I was lured to check this book out by an interest in travel writing, also in hamburg, and by the positive reviews. but honestly this guy is a clown. unless you are one of the '...americans who are surprised that there are good things in germany other than oktoberfest', then you will be bewildered by how stupid this guy is. basically this book is a combo of 1, incessant references to various other travel writers, naipaul, greene, etc 2, a simplistic description of german patrimony- fontane, goethe, etc, which is fine as far as it goes but it just doesn't go far- for example, could he talk about, say, wolfgang tillmans, who lived in hamburg for many years? gerhard richter? german music since the war, a super rich tradition? beuys? etc. his vision of german intellectual history stops a long time ago. 3, a weird preoccupation with the holocaust. i know, maybe it seems reasonable to have, but i am frustrated by a vision that travel books about germany must be about the holocaust basically which is a good half of this book. he writes about being uncomfortable that young berliners can go to a restaurant or eat tagliatelle or something, which leaves me like WHAT i mean americans eat tagliatelle, what about vietnam? not that its comparable but i don't see his vision that all germans until the end of time (furthermore assuming all people in chic berlin restauraunts are german anyway) can't have any pleasure because of the holocaust. stupid passingby references to adorno, the fact that he couldnt really learn the language enough to read simple literature, etc doesnt help, nor do bizarre unrelated assertions about how the american civil war was caused exclusively by slavery and any other reason is a mystification. he is so provincial! and pompous! i mean its germany not like thailand or zimbabwe, it really isn't so exotic! yet for him the idea that he lived in germany for a while on a grant is some crazy adventure. and it could be if he'd done cool stuff there, but mostly he just sips on ice cold pilsners and stupid stuff like that. I never have been to hamburg, some of his info about that was interesting- on the level of the wikipedia article about hamburg- but his description of berlin, a place i have lived, is preposterous. where are the american-esque parts of berlin he talks about? its true as he points out, many parts of the city are relatively recent- but like, 1900, not 1950. in fact the city has contracted severely since 1950. where are the walmarts in berlin? maybe he's talking about like neukolln? but turks in weird pants and occasional discount shops aren't really american to me. honestly suburban paris or london is a million times more like newport news or silver spring MD than anywhere I have ever been in berlin, and I lived there for half a year.
basically this guy has less knowledge about german intellectual history, the recent history of the places he writes about, etc than a sophomore german studies student should. and that is coupled with a bizarre sense that germany is evil and no book written about it can not be about the holocaust.not reccomended at all for anyone who isn't self-satisfied, lacking in intellectual curiosity and over the age of 60.
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Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Oliver August. By Flamingo.
The regular list price is $14.95.
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3 comments about Along the Wall and Watchtowers: A Journey Down Germany's Divide.
- This book is only a diery of a young man traveling the distance of the old East/West German Border. It point out several places of interest not only of that of the old border zone but of those of WWII such as the caves of the making of the V-2 rockets which is rather interesting. I was hoping for more on the Border Zone itself. I was a border guard there in the Hof and Coburg sectors and found he did not reach the true meaning of the border for both sides and what it stand for today. I also found it a poor guide to us because he did not get to all musuems and place of interest for the border. The author seem to give more detail to the people he met then what the Border Zone looks like today. There are no photographs or maps to each of the areas which could help as a guide and to keep the interest of younger people. I also found the research misleading and inaccurate for the old Border Zone such as the city of Hof and the unknown soldier of the tri-zone. For history seeker its an OK book, for History of the East/West German Border Zone I do not recommend. Sorry!
- Oliver August, the son of East German parents who escaped to West Germany, drives along the route of the now-vanished Wall that separated East from West, and interviews people on both sides of the border along the way. The author is perfectly bilingual and bicultural, and thus in the ideal position to explain to the reader the peculiarities of German behavior and attitudes. The Easterners regard themselves as Germany's second-class citizens and look with nostalgia upon the old East German regime. The final chapter (of 14) is about Berlin, where the author interviews the East German general who supervised the border guards. The author writes well and tells a compelling story of how, despite reunification, the two halves of Germany are far from being able to understand one another. The book has no photos, one diagram, and (only) one map.
- It's an interesting subject, but having spent a lot of time in Germany, I'm probably more interested in the subject than most people in the U.S. would be, though . . . I dunno, it's an okay book, but the kid's kinda clueless. he keeps complaining that he can't find maps that show the East/West border, but the border corresponds to the extant borders between the German states, and those are shown on most maps, so what's the problem? He spends too much time complaining he's lost and not enough describing what he sees. Some pictures would have been nice, but you can see typical pictures of watchtowers and fences all over the web, so he probably purposely omitted those. I'm really stunned at how few people he spoke with, or at least how few conversations he relates; I've spoken to more east Germans in an afternoon drive between Leipzig and Dresden. The basic complaint I have here is that he could easily have written a few hundred pages, instead of the what -- 110, 120 in the book. It wasn't boring and he does know how to write.
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Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Graham Lees and Campaign For Real Ale. By Verulam Publishing Ltd.
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No comments about Good Beer Guide to Munich and Bavaria (CAMRA Guides).
Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Larry T Maxim. By Landsberger Verlagsanstalt Martin Neumeyer.
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No comments about Assignment in Bavaria.
Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Liz Smith. By Marshall Cavendish Corporation.
The regular list price is $15.95.
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No comments about Culture Shock! Munich: A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette (Culture Shock! at Your Door).
Posted in Germany (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Langenscheidt. By Langenscheidt Publishers.
The regular list price is $13.95.
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1 comments about Jiffy Travel Pack German (Book & Cassette Edition).
- I carried this little book with me when I traveled Germany last year. It was very helpful, all the more so because of the tape.
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Visitor's Guide to Germany : Black Forest
Journey Through The Black Forest
Germany Map (Country Map)
Lancashire, Where Women Die of Love
The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany
Along the Wall and Watchtowers: A Journey Down Germany's Divide
Good Beer Guide to Munich and Bavaria (CAMRA Guides)
Assignment in Bavaria
Culture Shock! Munich: A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette (Culture Shock! at Your Door)
Jiffy Travel Pack German (Book & Cassette Edition)
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