Germania: In Wayward Pursuit of the Germans and Their History |  | Author: Simon Winder Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
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Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 480 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.7 x 1.5
ISBN: 0374254001 Dewey Decimal Number: 943 EAN: 9780374254001 ASIN: 0374254001
Publication Date: March 16, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
A UNIQUE EXPLORATION OF GERMAN CULTURE, FROM SAUSAGE ADVERTISEMENTS TO WAGNER
Sitting on a bench at a communal table in a restaurant in Regensburg, his plate loaded with disturbing amounts of bratwurst and sauerkraut made golden by candlelight shining through a massive glass of beer, Simon Winder was happily swinging his legs when a couple from Rottweil politely but awkwardly asked: So: why are you here?” This book is an attempt to answer that question. Why spend time wandering around a country that remains a sort of dead zone for many foreigners, surrounded as it is by a force field of historical, linguistic, climatic, and gastronomic barriers? Winder’s book is propelled by a wish to reclaim the brilliant, chaotic, endlessly varied German civilization that the Nazis buried and ruined, and that, since 1945, so many Germans have worked to rebuild. Germania is a very funny book on serious topicshow we are misled by history, how we twist history, and how sometimes it is best to know no history at all. It is a book full of curiosities: odd food, castles, mad princes, fairy tales, and horse-mating videos. It is about the limits of language, the meaning of culture, and the pleasure of townscape. Simon Winder is the author of the highly praised The Man Who Saved Britain and works in publishing in London. Sitting on a bench at a communal table in a restaurant in Regensburg, his plate loaded with bratwurst and sauerkraut made golden by candlelight shining through a massive glass of beer, Simon Winder was happily swinging his legs when a couple from Rottweil politely but awkwardly asked: So: why are you here?”
In this travels through Germany, Simon Winder tries to understand why foreigners spend time wandering around a country with such historical, linguistic, climatic, and gastronomic barriers. Winder’s book is propelled by a wish to reclaim the brilliant, chaotic and endlessly varied German civilization that the Nazis buried and ruined, and that, since 1945, so many Germans have worked to rebuild.
Germania is an entertaining investigation of serious topicshow we are misled by history, how we twist history, and how sometimes it is best to know no history at all. It is a book full of curiosities: odd food, castles, mad princes, fairy tales, and strange videos. It is about the limits of language, the meaning of culture, and the pleasure of townscape. Simon Winder has spent more than enough time in Germany to catch the bug, that virus that turns even innocent tourists into amateur anthropologists, desperate to figure out just how the Germans got that way . . . Winder has a severe case, but luckily, he's a smart, witty fellow with a knack for finding the threads that connect patches of the crazy quilt that is German history.”Marc Fisher, The Washington Post
Wonderfulvery witty and highly entertaining, splendidly and amusingly opinionated, marvellously colourful in its descriptions of unusual places and little known people, and full of enjoyable insights into German history and culture.”Ian Kershaw, author of Hitler: A Biography
Winder is perhaps the first to have succeeded in presenting Germany as no less fun that France or Italy and the Germans as a nation of eccentrics very like our own . . . He excels in a style that he self-deprecatingly calls `anecdotal facetiousness’ but which manages to convey copious quantities of facts in the most enjoyable way possible.”The London Evening Standard
It’s plain that Winder’s mind is fizzing with interesting ideas. He can write beautifully, embodying a whole world in a phrase . . . He finds new angles on familiar subjects . . . His excitement is beguiling and infectious; he’s widely read, good-humoured anda wonderful asset in writing this bookutterly lacking an axe to sharpen on the subject of the Second World War . . . There are many pleasures to be savoured in Germania . . . gems that make Winder’s clever, rambunctious work a book to treasure.” Miranda Seymour, Literary Review
This book is the chronicle of a passion. It is also an engrossing, informative and hilarious read. He has spun an enthralling weave of travelogue, anecdote and historical mock-epic. What is often most engaging about these encounters is the spectacle of Winder himself. It made me laugh so hard that I woke up my wife and had to give up reading the book in bed. If Bill Bryson had collaborated with W. G. Sebald to write a book about Germany, they might have wound up with something like this. Winder’s extravagant mixing of genres allows him to seek historical depth without sacrificing the pleasures of anecdote. There is a serious purpose behind all the playfulness.”Christopher Clark, The Sunday Times (London)
His rich and broadly chronological history of Germany and its peoples is minutely researched. Interspersed in the narrative, however, are the deliciously opinionated, often hilarious and occasionally vituperative reminiscences of the author’s many excursions to Germany and Austria. They make the book. The love-hate nature of his relationship with his subject brings out the best in his writing . . . It is the kind of knockabout humour that has British readers rolling while Germans smile politely but a little uncomprehendingly . . . A splendid offering.”Hugh Mortimer, Financial Times (UK)
Simon Winder peppers his meaty tome with quirky digressions, anecdotes and memories, revealing intriguing insights about Germany, from its cuisine to its architecture, people and history.”ABTA Magazine
Travelogue and historical narrative are merged in a gloriously free-wheeling narrative of the entire sweep of German history . . . This book is clearly not intended to be the last word on German history. But for any readers wanting a learned, entertaining and lucid introduction to a notoriously complex subject, it should certainly be their first.”Seven Magazine, The Sunday Telegraph
This candid, cheerful and idiosyncratic approach to travelogue makes a refreshing change. Whether being stridently critical or puppyishly enthusiastic, Winder is a master of the well-turned phrase or the unexpected insight.”The Times (London)
Best to follow Winder on his rambles as you’d follow a favourite uncle who knows lots about lots of apparently random things . . . He is most engaging and sporadically wise . . . Winder’s mind is a very agreeable place to go rambling.”The Scotsman
Entertaining and informative... Delightful”Philip Hensher, The Independent
A beautifully written and insightful book . . . It can only be hoped that it will be read by many and that it will be recognised for what it is: a witty, thought-provoking account of Germany’s various histories, cultures and oddities.”The Irish Times
A cheerful, dryly unserious survey and travelogue through the landscape and psyche of Germany. British writer Winder (The Man Who Saved Britain: A Personal Journey into the Disturbing World of James Bond, 2006) slips as giddily into discussing the ravages of the Thirty Years' War as the awfulness of German cuisine, the pogroms that seized German towns in the wake of the Napoleonic wars as the family tree of the Hohenzollerns. The author works with a meandering, loose chronology, beginning with the fantasy of ancient Germania as `a land of forest and personal freedom’ and ending after World War II, when the incomparable richness of German history and achievement was `replaced with messianic infantilism.’ Winder explains that first visiting Strasbourg cathedral as a young teen awakened his awareness of `an aesthetic sense,’ and that he has been fascinated by Germany as Britain's `weird twin’ ever since. As a Brit, he has been inculcated in the horrors of German militarism, which since World War I essentially shuttered all intellectual and cultural curiosity about its golden prewar years, once `an intolerably poignant place’ depicted in Thomas Mann's early novels, now a `sort of dead zone.’ The author makes a dogged, gracious attempt to re-engage with what is remarkable about Germany, or at least interesting and moving, even in its grotesquenessoften in the manner of W.G. Sebald, whom Winder evidently reveres. In his travels, Winder has galloped across the countryside in search of the German echt and on the way stopped at every notable castle, cathedral, walled town and bulky monument from Aachen to Wittenberg . . . Charmingly illuminative . . . he offers an impressive discussion of the shattering effects of World War I, both on Germany and the world. A nimble and knowledgeable . . . cabinet of curiosities.”Kirkus Reviews
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
Learning About Germany March 17, 2010 Amos Lassen (Little Rock, Arkansas) 48 out of 53 found this review helpful
Winder, Simon. "Gemania: In Wayward Pursuit of the Germans and Their History", Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2010.
Learning about Germany
Amos Lassen
One of the book groups that I belong to is reading Amos Elon's, "The Pity of It All: A Portrait of the German-Jewish Epoch 1743-1933" and I am really enjoying the book. However, there seems to be missing from it a substantial portion of German History so I went looking for something that would fill in the gaps. I came across Simon Winder's "Germania" and it not only does this but it is a fun read. The culture of Germany is something of an enigma as well as a fascination for the Western world and Winder lets us look at this culture through a completely different lens--one that has a bit of humor and wit. He goes back in history to the pre-Roman past and takes us to the Nazi seizure of power in 1933 (which made it perfect to accompany Elon's book). His history is chronological but he goes off the chronology to give us some interesting tidbits of German history and he spends a good deal of time on the language which defines the country. This is just what I needed as Elon often writes of language but without a great deal of explanation.
Germany is one of those countries that is still uncomfortable to many and I would guess that many visit it without knowing exactly why they do so. Winder attempts to look at this and explain why Germany is a place to visit even with its horrible past. The book is very, very funny and deals with many of the strange aspects of Germany as well as the country's culture and language and it resembles nothing of the German history course I took in college--but that was long, long ago.
A History Written in Marzipan April 24, 2010 Jerry A. Dowless (New York, NY) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Germania is not a conventional history book narrating the story of Germany. Instead, it relates the impressions the surviving physical traces of Germany's pre-twentieth century history--castles, cathedrals, market squares, monuments to the Napoleonic Wars, miniature portraits of rulers carved in apricot pits--make upon a non-German. Thus, that Simon Winder is not German is not somehow a problem of his book Germania. Instead, it is rather the point of it.
It is Winder's own outsider status that makes his interpretations of German history so interesting to those of us who approach that history as something other than our own. I have read quite informative histories of Germany and the Holy Roman Empire--I heartily recommend for instance Holborn's three volume History of Modern Germany--that do not present as vivid a portrait of the place, the people, and their culture as does Winder's Germania, precisely because Winder sets out explicitly to explain this rich, complex, and sometimes tragic nation to the rest of us using his own experiences.
Thus Germania is an excellent book for those people like me who have read the history but still do not think they have grasped the essence of this fascinating place. Or for people who want to learn history without bothering with the pretensions of contemporary academic historians. Or for people who are curious about finding out about German history apart from its role in the World Wars and the Holocaust. Or for people who want to understand how this earlier history contributed to that unfortunate role. Or for people who simply delight in well-written travel narratives filled with sometimes hilarious, sometimes touching, but always informative anecdotes.
Germania will make you think, and it will make you laugh out loud. But most of all, it will make you want to book those tickets to Frankfurt.
Wandering Through German History May 11, 2010 Reader (Grand Junction, Colorado) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is not a straight line recitation of history. Rather, the author takes freqent digressions and turns but for the most part they add to the interest of the book. I doubt it will ever be cited in serious history books but it is an interesting read.
Wayward April 5, 2010 Christian Schlect (Yakima, Washington/USA) 11 out of 15 found this review helpful
Simon Winder possesses a storehouse of knowledge on the castles, landscape, music, art, museums, nobility, and military history of the landmass taken up by present day Austria and Germany--and uses a shotgun approach in scattering this idiosyncratic knowledge across pages of this text. Mr. Winder's highly personal observations are sometimes useful, many times obscure, funny at times, but when taken as a whole, confusing rather than edifying.
Unfortunately, the complex and lengthy history of Germany and its people does not lend itself to a sustained comical treatment, especially that of an Englishman (who does not speak German) apparently attempting to write nearly every paragraph in a pale imitation of the style favored by the American humorist P. J. O'Rourke. By the middle of this over-the-top book, I was struggling to finish. (I am sure a German would be struggling not to load his Luger and go author hunting.)
As an aside, I have been to Berlin, where I thought the Berlin Cathedral was not, as claimed by Mr. Winder, a "truly awful historicist stoneyard." And, in Vienna, I was once in the area around St. Stephen's, not viewing it then as the author does as "one of those terrible tourist zones."
A Labor of Love, but Falls Far Short April 25, 2010 Steve Kettmann 9 out of 12 found this review helpful
This is my review published in the San Francisco Chronicle:
Germania
In Wayward Pursuit of the Germans and Their History
By Simon Winder
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 454 pages; $25)
At first glance one assumes that Simon Winder has in mind with "Germania" something like an updating of the late great Gordon Craig of Stanford's "The Germans," a classic study by the onetime dean of American historians of Germany. Actually, not at all.
Winder, who "works in publishing" in Britain, may in one sense have set off, as the subtitle says, "In Wayward Pursuit of the Germans and Their History," but not in any sense you'd think. For example, as he mentions several times, self-floggingly, he does not actually speak German.
That is, even after many dozens of trips to Germany over the years, he seems to have no ability to carry on any kind of conversation. To call this bizarre would be an understatement. And it's not as if Winder tries to make up for this lack by treading softly. He mocks Germans regularly, puckishly and pedantically. I laughed hardest when he referred to "horror at German food," as if the Brits could possibly cop an attitude in this area. Is the man insane? Compare a banger (blah!) with a Nurnberger bratwurst (excellent!).
It was only as I made it several hundred pages into Winder's alternately intriguing and wearying descriptions of many centuries of German history, as revealed through trips to small-town museums and schlosses, that I finally understood: Winder has been a Germany obsessive for years and makes the offensive put-downs in proactive self-defense, given the vitriolic anti-German sentiment that to this day maintains a robust following in Britain.
So maybe only then can Winder offer such arresting thoughts as his suggestion that the world would have been better off if his country had never gotten involved in the First World War.
"If Britain had been neutral in 1914 it is hard to see how Germany could not have won the war in a fairly conventional way in a couple of years, thereby sparing the unlimited disasters that followed," he writes. "After all, in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War almost everyone just got on with their lives, buying stuff and having families - and a Europe dominated by the Germany of 1914 would have been infinitely preferable to a Europe dominated by the Germany of 1939."
He has a point. No botched peace, no Third Reich. Still, it takes an original - and brave - thinker to write that kind of thing down. (He says early on that he's happy "not to be a professional historian.") Given the continuing glee with which the British press often resorts to hate-mongering against Germans, even at a time when, according to Gallup, Germans are Americans' favorite non-English-speaking foreigners, it's a nice change of pace to get a whiff of Winder's highly unusual honesty.
"The Germans saw themselves in the Great War as sitting at the heart of European heritage, fighting against a bunch of vulgar materialists (the British), pants-down revanchists (the French) and drunken savages (the Russians)," he writes. "Until 1914 most British intellectuals would have denied being vulgar materialists, but would have been happy to agree with the descriptions of their new allies and have conceded Germany's central place in European culture.
"In 1914 this was knocked on the head with an immediate campaign across British universities to expunge 'German' thinking and block out any sense at all of Germany as a major culture, except perhaps in the far-distant past. It became, for obvious reasons, suspect to have any interest in Germany at all."
The book spans many centuries, but wisely chooses to break off as Hitler seizes power in 1933. Winder can be too long-winded and vapid, as when he adopts a gee-whiz tone in remarking that in many European countries, the south is warmer than in the north, with the corresponding differences you'd expect. But Winder has real passion for his subject and a nutty flair for the original, and, best of all, he finds marzipan absolutely revolting.
Steve Kettmann, a former Chronicle reporter, lives in Berlin and writes a weekly column on politics for the Berliner Zeitung. E-mail him at books@sfchronicle.com.
This article appeared on page F - 4 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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