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Loading... Germania: In Wayward Pursuit of the Germans and Their History (2010)by Simon Winder
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. There were elements of this book that I found to be clichéd and annoying such as the contemporary British travel writing troupes of dreary museums and kitschy monuments. However, I was won over by the author's astute observations of German history and culture that went well beyond what is normally found and suggest to me that Winder is a thinker as well as a writer. ( ) Years after reading Mr. Winders subsequent book, Danubia, I finally located a copy of Germania. Winder is a quirky person and this book is at times hilarious, at other times horrific and sometimes hateful about Germans. I coud not stop reading. Now I have to read the third book in this group, Lotharingia. UPDATE: I picked this book back up in 2021, got about 150 pages into it, then got distracted by other books and sort of forgot that I was reading it. Not a great endorsement for a book. I'm marking it as abandoned and moving it from the pile of stuff on the end table back to its place on the bookshelf; my instinct is to toss it out but I'll keep it for awhile and see if the mood strikes me again. Gave this a start in June 2018, and then moved it back to my to-read list. While I enjoyed the writing, my knowledge of German history is too weak to follow along. I plan to read a more cut-and-dry history of the nation in order to get the basic facts down, and then come back to this book for the fun stuff. In this delightful romp through German culture and history, Simon Winder does two unexpected things: admits that he can’t speak German; and ends the narrative in 1933. Winder overcomes these potentially fatal handicaps, and his book Germania gives a solid overview of the history and culture of the Germans. Winder, an Englishman and frequent traveller to Germany, naturally takes a travelogue approach. It’s a personal story of discovery as much as anything. I was put in mind of A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson, or Blue Latitudes by Tony Horwitz (both of which I also thoroughly enjoyed). There is humour throughout, but Winder also skilfully includes the serious side of things, and even hints at the dark side of German history. His choice to end the narrative when he does allows him to only ever hint at *that* dark part of the country’s history. The great success of this book is that it brings all the incredible stories of German history to light for English-speakers in an accessible and enjoyable book. Winder has actually done a “central European” trilogy, and I must get on to the other two volumes, which deal with the former Habsburg Empire and the Benelux nations respectively.
While the British generally contemplate their European neighbours with puzzlement, none arouses a greater sense of bafflement than the Germans Early on in the book, he confesses that he has never really managed to get his head around the compound nouns and modal particles of the German language ("I reeled into my adult life with a virtual language blank, beyond an ability to order beer or ask for platform numbers"). Which in itself is fine, but is it really an excuse for the fact that in over 400 pages, Winder doesn't manage to have one proper conversation with a German? Some of them speak English, apparently. It makes the "personal history" bit seem like little more than a publishing fad, and adds a cheap gloss to an otherwise rewarding read. Belongs to Publisher SeriesRainbow pocketboeken (1402) Awards
"Germania" explores how people are misled by history, how they twist history, and how sometimes it is best to know no history at all. The work is full of curiosities, odd food, castles, mad princes, and fairy tales--the unseen sides of Germany. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)943History & geography History of Europe Germany and neighboring central European countriesLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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