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The Shortest History of Germany (2017)

by James Hawes

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4231563,283 (3.56)11
"An narrative history that offers a fresh take on the last 2,000 years of Germany's history--from the invention of the word "German" by Julius Caesar in 58 BC, through the rise of Nazi Germany, and up to the present day."--Provided by publisher.
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» See also 11 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 15 (next | show all)
A breezy history that confidently speeds through prehistory through roman influence, skips the carolingians, dips into the HRE and Teutonic Order and then grinds to a halt around the 1800s to develop a thesis about the horrible Prussian influence on the German soul, the impact of which not only results in WWI but is to blame for WWII and the lingering effects of which still resonate today. That latter point is what gets the most criticism in an otherwise pretty good speedrun. We get some postwar Germany and reunification as well. The very end is the most political as it relates to current world issues (Merkel, migration and AfD) and your opinion on that breaks by how much you agree with the author's take on said events. It's at least up to date, where a safer approach might have been to leave the narrative somewhere after reunification. ( )
  A.Godhelm | Nov 17, 2024 |
Great short book which takes a very long term approach to history, essentially Charlemagne to the present. There is the real Germany, the south and west, at the heart of Europe. Then there is the east, dominated by Prussia and battling/cooperating with Slavs, Russia and the east. Latter is like the American old south, and he argues that tht needs to be understood and patiently tolerated. It won't change. Hitler's power, like the Junkers, lay on the east. ( )
  elimatta | Sep 21, 2024 |
Recommended ( )
  Louisasbookclub | Jun 30, 2024 |
Sparse smatterings of interesting facts intertwined with large sections of total hyperbole and bias. This is not a history book, rather an opinion piece on why Catholicism is the greatest thing to happen to Europe, whilst the 'barbaric' east Germans have always held it back. Perhaps if the author consistently took the same magnifying glass to the corruption and misgivings of West Germany, then perhaps the book would be slightly more rounded and balanced. There are some topics which display a total lack of understanding, and to be honest I struggled to read on past the misinformed part about Hegel. The conclusion also seemed off-kilter, is the author suggesting that East Germany be turned into an independent state just to save Europe? However, the author has excellent prose and can be funny at points, it's just a shame that this book reads more like a Dailymail-does-history opinion piece. ( )
  Blackzowen | Oct 2, 2023 |
Clearly written, easy to follow, enjoyable to read. My one complaint is that the maps were nearly illegible because the font was minuscule and only supposedly-different shades of grey were used. ( )
  blueskygreentrees | Jul 30, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 15 (next | show all)
Although this history is fast-paced and refreshingly different, it is also seriously problematic.
 
A good piece of writing should be brief and concise, but it must also be worthy.
 
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To the memory of my father, Maurice Hawes, and the future of my third son, Karl Maurice Hawes v. Oppen, whose lives crossed for a few hours on 25 February 2015
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The West is in full retreat.
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"An narrative history that offers a fresh take on the last 2,000 years of Germany's history--from the invention of the word "German" by Julius Caesar in 58 BC, through the rise of Nazi Germany, and up to the present day."--Provided by publisher.

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