A woman in Berlin, anonymous. by. Stern, James, tr. Publication date. Topics. World War, , World War, Publisher. New York, Harcourt, www.doorway.ru Interaction Count: · Anonymous Woman Berlin Diary. Read the story of Marta Hillers and see her passport. It is the diary of a German woman from 20 April to 22 June , during and after the Battle of Berlin. The book details the author’s being raped and choosing to take a Soviet officer as a protector during the Red Army occupation. The diary written by a young woman in her thirties who chose to call herself "Anonymous" chronicles two months of her life during the Battle of Berlin, from Ap to J.
The anonymous author of A Woman in Berlin was a young woman at the time of the fall of Berlin. She was a journalist and editor during and after the war. Philip Boehm has translated more than thirty novels and plays by German and Polish writers, including Herta Müller, Franz Kafka, and Hanna Krall. For these translations he has received. "The anonymous author of this memoir was living in Berlin in April when Red Army soldiers marched into the city. What followed was an orgy of rape. In a series of unsentimental diary entries, the book's author - a German woman in her early thirties - describes the final days of the Third Reich, and the ordeal she suffered after Russian. A Woman in Berlin stands as one of the essential books for understanding war and life (A. S. Byatt, author of Possession). show more. (14, ratings by Goodreads) Paperback. Kushiel's Legacy. English. By (author) Anonymous, Translated by Philip Boehm. US$ US$ You save US$
The diary written by a young woman in her thirties who chose to call herself "Anonymous" chronicles two months of her life during the Battle of Berlin, from Ap to J. A Woman in Berlin (German: Eine Frau in Berlin) (/) is an anonymous memoir by a German woman, revealed in to be journalist Marta Hillers. It covers the weeks from 20 April to 22 June , during the capture of Berlin and its occupation by the Red Army. The writer describes the widespread rapes by Soviet soldiers, including her own, and the women's pragmatic approach to survival, often taking Soviet officers for protection. When A Woman in Berlin was first published anonymously in German (five years after an English language version was published in ) it was greeted with disgust by German audiences and quickly went out of print. The author was so shaken by the response that she would not allow her diary to be republished again until after her death.
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