Synopses & Reviews
In Berlin at War, acclaimed historian Roger Moorhouse provides a magnificent and detailed portrait of everyday life at the epicenter of the Third Reich. Berlin was the stage upon which the rise and fall of the Third Reich was most visibly played out. It was the backdrop for the most lavish Nazi ceremonies, the site of Albert Speers grandiose plans for a new world metropolis,” and the scene of the final climactic battle to defeat Nazism. Berlin was the place where Hitlers empire ultimately meet its end, but it suffered mightily through the war as well; not only was the city subjected to the full wrath of the Soviet ground offensive and siege in 1945, but it also found itself a prime target for the air war, attracting more raids, more aircraft, and more tonnage than any other German city. Combining groundbreaking research with a gripping narrative, Moorhouse brings all of the complexity and chaos of wartime Berlin to life. Berlin at War is the incredible story of the cityand peoplethat saw the whole of this epic conflict, from start to finish.
Review
Kirkus, starred reviewA superb addition to the social history of Nazi Germany.... An august contribution to the city-during-a-war genre, worthy to sit alongside such classics as Margaret Leechs Reveille in Washington (1941) and Ernest Furgusons Ashes of Glory (1996).”
Publishers Weekly
British historian Moorhouse puts a human face on the capital city of a Reich at war.”
The Independent (London)
Roger Moorhouse has marshalled an impressive range of primary sources including newspaper reports, official documents, memoirs, diaries and interviews with the dwindling band of survivors to create a gripping panorama of Berlin at war.... Moorhouses meticulous and painstaking research is matched by his narrative verve, wide-ranging sympathy and eye for telling detail.”
Daily Telegraph (London)
Evocative social history.... [Moorhouse] punctures a variety of myths. The Berlin he depicts is not the portrait of fanatical Nazis and hunted Jews that we are used to, although both groups are represented. Instead it is a city defined by apathy, filled with people who are content to pretend they cannot smell the unpleasant background odour until it becomes too overpowering to ignore.”
Mail on Sunday (London)
Roger Moorhouses measured, sympathetic book offers a fascinating corrective.... It doesnt try to absolve the Germans altogether, but what he does do is help us understand them. A good many loathed Hitler and all he stood for; some risked torture and death to save Jews; the majority toed the line, not so much because they were ardent Nazis as because they were Germans who instinctively cleaved to the rule of law and just didnt like to rock the boat.”
Max Hastings, Sunday Times (London)
Roger Moorhouse has deep knowledge of wartime Germany
[and] a nice eye for social detail.... Anyone who reads Moorhouse to the bitter end will agree that Berlin suffered titanic punishment for the titanic crimes of Germany.”
Ian Thomson, Telegraph (London)
In Berlin at War, Roger Moorhouse provides a painstakingly detailed account of everyday life in Hitlers metropolis from 1939 to the conflicts end.... Using a variety of sources ranging from unpublished memoirs to interviews, Moorhouse builds an absorbing picture of hardship and despair in the nerve centre of Nazi Germany.... As a leading historian of modern Germany, Moorhouse has chronicled a largely unknown story with scholarship, narrative verve and, at times, an awful, harrowing immediacy.”
Herald (Scotland)
Intelligent and absorbing.... This is very much a peoples history where the backbone of the narrative has not been supplied by the wider military progress of the war but by the response of many ordinary Berliners. Moorhouse has dug deeply and diligently and, in so doing, he has provided a truly innovative history.”
Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post
[Moorhouse] tells the story of Berlins war thoroughly and fairly. He focuses as much as possible on ordinary citizens rather than Nazi kingpins and apparatchiks, and he leaves little doubt that this was a war few Berliners had wanted and from which all of them suffered.... Now Berlin has regained its standing as one of the worlds great cities. That it started at ground zero is made all too clear by this excellent book.”
Christian Science Monitor
[D]espite the voluminous literature about the rise and fall of Nazi Germany, there have been no books that analyzed what civilian life was like for those who lived in Berlin during the war. Given this, Berlin at War
is overdue and welcome.... [T]his carefully researched study is the story of ordinary civilians who were very much in the middle of the fighting for extended periods of time. There are fresh insights on every page and even readers very knowledgeable about World War II will learn a great deal from this important and insightful volume.”
Post-Bulletin (Rochester, MN)
[R]iveting.... Berlin at War is a masterfully written and necessary addition to the ever-expanding shelf of books about World War II.”
Washington Times
Berlin at War is an extensively researched and absorbing account of the city that went from being the host of the 1936 Olympics to being a pile of rubble less than a decade later.”
TucsonCitizen.com
[T]his remarkable book vividly shows what it was like to live in Berlin from 1939 through 1945. From the jubilant, extravagant celebrations for Hitlers 50th birthday in 1939 until the Soviet invasion six years later, this is historical reporting at its very best.”
Irish Times
The greatest achievement of Moorhouses book is that it manages to capture the complexities and contradictions of life in Hitlers Germany, illuminating the experiences of those who were victims, perpetrators or both. In so doing it provides something rare: a popular- history account that will satisfy both general readers and professional historians.”
Andrew Roberts, Financial Times
Few books on [World War II] genuinely increase the sum of our collective knowledge of this exhaustively covered period, but this one does.... Moorhouse is particularly good with the small-arms fire of history, those illuminating details or unknown life-stories that shed light on a phenomenon of Berlin life.... By trawling through the complex, often deeply morally compromised personal stories of many survivors, Moorhouse has produced new insights into the way ordinary Berliners tried to escape the disastrous ill-fortune of living in the belly of the beast.”
The Christian Century
Hundreds of books have been written about the Nazi regime and what happened to the Jews under Hitler, but few books have been written about what life was like for ordinary Germans during that time. Using diaries, memoirs and interviews, Moorhouse gives an account of daily life in the capital, which despite the Nazis remained something of a liberal city.”
Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post, Best of 2010
Roger Moorhouse, a British writer of popular histories, describes life in the German capital from the confident and complacent (if also fearful) early months through the utter devastation ultimately wrought by Allied bombing and the ground attacks from east and west. Moorhouse is sympathetic to ordinary Berliners, especially as the bombing intensified and the city turned into an inferno, but he doesnt sentimentalize them.”
Alfred S. Regnery, The American Spectator
There is no end to books about the Germans and World War II, the Holocaust, and the battles and the evils of Nazism, but very few that explain the life of German civilians during those awful years. Berlin at War, by historian Roger Moorhouse, reminds us that war is not only about the fighting men, but the civilians as well.... This fascinating and beautifully written book tells the heart-rending story of those who died and those who surviveda part of World War II history that we all should know.”
Financial Times, holiday round-up
Berlin was the least fascist of any major German city yet it was among the most heavily bombed by Allies and its women suffered mass gang-rape by the Red Army. The searing experiences of Berliners are brought to life through often deeply morally compromised personal stories.”
Kansas City Star, Top 100 Books of the Year
It may be discomfiting for followers of World War II history to read about the air war over Berlin from the point of view of innocent German civilians on the ground, but English author Moorhouse provides stunning research and heartfelt interviews that never cease to fascinate.”
History Today (UK)
[A]s readable as a first-rate novel, full of gripping stories of suffering, endurance, courage and cowardice. Moorhouse is a clear-eyed, sensible and balanced historian who has substantially added to our knowledge of what happens when a society falls apart.”
The Bloomsbury Review
[A] detailed exploration of daily life in the sprawling capital of an enemy during wartime. Mundane activity
takes on a zestier level of interest as it unfolds within the grounds of a heavily targeted bomb zone.... More than a half century after this world war ended, Germanys former position as an enemy has faded. This significant new point of view does not attempt to excuse or diminish its well-documented excesses, but the approach puts a much different face on the enemy as a whole.”
Wall Street Journal
[A] notable contribution to the study of the Nazis.”
Choice
Moorhouse combines the chronology of the war with thematic chapters based on extensive archival, oral history, and secondary sources.... Highly recommended.”
Sunday Herald (Glasgow)
Moorhouse has written an extraordinarily detailed account of ordinary (in so much as that word has a meaning in this context) life in Berlin during the Second World War.”
The Guardian (London)
Theres a pounding quietness to Moorhouses description of life in Berlin, 1939 to 1945.... The big stuff, including the final battle through the ruins, weve read before, but not the mean details of degradation
or the surreal stories.”
Synopsis
From the corridors of power to the daily experiences of Berliners, a magnificent portrait of everyday life at the epicenter of the Third Reich
Synopsis
The thrilling and definitive history of World War I in the Middle East By 1914 the powers of Europe were sliding inexorably toward war, and they pulled the Middle East along with them into one of the most destructive conflicts in human history. In The Fall of the Ottomans, award-winning historian Eugene Rogan brings the First World War and its immediate aftermath in the Middle East to vivid life, uncovering the often ignored story of the region's crucial role in the conflict. Unlike the static killing fields of the Western Front, the war in the Middle East was fast-moving and unpredictable, with the Turks inflicting decisive defeats on the Entente in Gallipoli, Mesopotamia, and Gaza before the tide of battle turned in the Allies' favor. The postwar settlement led to the partition of Ottoman lands, laying the groundwork for the ongoing conflicts that continue to plague the modern Arab world. A sweeping narrative of battles and political intrigue from Gallipoli to Arabia, The Fall of the Ottomans is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the Great War and the making of the modern Middle East.
Synopsis
Berlin was the city at the very center of World War Two. It was the launching pad for Hitlers empire, the embodiment of his vision of a world metropolis.” Berlin was also the place where Hitlers Reich would ultimately fall. Berlin suffered more air raids than any other German city and endured the full force of a Soviet siege.
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 capitalthe privations, the hopes and fears, and the nonconformist tradition that saw some Berliners provide underground succour to the citys remaining Jews. Combining comprehensive research with gripping narrative, Berlin at War is the incredible story of the cityand peoplethat saw the whole of World War Two.
Synopsis
Few books on [World War II] genuinely increase the sum of our collective knowledge of this exhaustively covered period, but this one does
. By trawling through the complex, often deeply morally compromised personal stories of many survivors, Moorhouse has produced new insights into the way ordinary Berliners tried to escape the disastrous ill-fortune of living in the belly of the beast.”Andrew Roberts, Financial Times
About the Author
Roger Moorhouse studied history at the University of London and is a regular contributor to BBC History Magazine. He is co-author with Norman Davies of Microcosm: Portrait of a Central European City and author of Killing Hitler: The Plots, The Assassins, and the Dictator Who Cheated Death. He lives in Buckinghamshire, England.
Table of Contents
Prologue: Führerweather'1. Faith in the Führer
2. A Deadly Necessity
3. A Guarded Optimism
4. Marching on their Stomach
5. Brutality Made Stone
6. Unwelcome Strangers
7. A Taste of Things to Come
8. Into Oblivion
9. An Evil Cradling
10. The Peoples Friend
11. The Watchers and the Watched
12. The Persistent Shadow
13. Enemies of the State
14. Against All Odds
15. Reaping the Whirlwind
16. To Unreason and Beyond
17. Ghost Town
Epilogue: Hope