Red Love
Summary
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Red Love by Maxim Leo
The gripping story, lovingly told, of what held East Germany together - and what, in the end, destroyed it.
Beautiful and supremely touching -- Keith Lowe, author of Savage Continent Sunday Telegraph A serious, very moving book.. a weave of narratives about five lives, connected by blood and marriage but divided by politics -- Neal Ascherson London Review of Books Simultaneously gripping and meditative, an engaging and thought-provoking portrait of a disappeared world -- Natasha Tripney Observer Compelling ... [Leo] is terrific at elucidating the slow, incremental steps by which people come to lie to themselves... guile, guilt and disappointment drip from these pages and Red Love is all the more affecting for it -- Marina Benjamin New Statesman With truthful tenderness and wry humour, Maxim Leo looks back not in anger but in an effort to understand the past -- Iain Finlayson The Times Honest and sober... a convincing depiction of what everyday life was like and the legacy it has left... illuminating Metro An absorbing and personal account that gives outsiders an insight into life in the GDR Shortlist [Red Love] gives us extraordinary, intimate access to East Germany when the state was not just in the family apartment but locked within the minds and aspirations of all its citizens Sunday Telegraph Red Love is an important and compelling book for many reasons, but perhaps more than anything it reminds us of the pull of family, however flawed it might be -- Susie Dent Spectator Red Love... is a memoir about three leftist German generations in a family seeking Utopia and trying to stay whole. -- Neal Ascherson Glasgow Herald Illuminating ... Red Love offers an engaging exploration of the complex decades that caused families to become strangers to one another, and a refreshing response to the deceptively simple question: "What was it like?" Independent Persuasive and absorbing... written with warmth, humour and no shortage of self-criticism -- Peter Graves TLS [S]earching and sensitive chronicle of three generations making the journey from euphoric hope to disillusionment to despair New York Times Extraordinarily compelling... Red Love is a story about the confusion and fear that came to those who lived in East Germany and suddenly saw their country disappear. Leo's memoir humanizes this history and offers readers a glimpse into a different past. New York Daily News A compassionate memoir... By unpicking the loyalties of both political and family life, Leo honours the complicated motivations of real people, resulting in a humane, enlightening history of a collapsed country and a lost home. Guardian Maxim Leo has produced a lucid, dispassionate, and altogether extraordinary account of three generations of his German family as Big History kicked them around and they, for the most part, made sterling attempts to kick back Los Angeles Review of Books Most touching memoir of a life in East Germany... so beautiful -- Susie Dent Radio 4's A Good Read The most extraordinary book, fascinating... a brilliant picture of a time... and of a place... I'd never seen [the GDR] like this before -- Harriet Gilbert Radio 4's A Good Read
Maxim Leo was born in 1970 in East Berlin. He studied Political Science at the Free University in Berlin and at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris. Since 1997 he is Editor of the Berliner Zeitung. In 2002 he was nominated for the Egon-Erwin-Kisch Prize, and in the same year won the German-French Journalism Prize. He won the Theodor Wolff Prize in 2006. He lives in Berlin.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9781782270423 |
| ISBN 10 | 1782270426 |
| Title | Red Love |
| Author | Maxim Leo |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | Pushkin Press |
| Year published | 2014-03-13 |
| Number of pages | 272 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |