Another tough one to rate. This is a pretty cool history of the Wall. The focus is on the people of Berlin and their stories. The author apparently conducted a great deal of interviews himself. These first-hand experiences gets the reader up-close to the wall. There's, i would say, the exact amount of clean cut history so you wouldn't need to know much about the wall before reading this book. But still, it's mostly about personal stories from people whose lives in one way or another were so much influenced by this crazy monstrosity.
There's also the problem you might have with this book. There's so many characters and you never truly get to know these people. It's fragments only. I understand this is not a book with long personal accounts of these indivuals' lives but at times i found myself wanting to know more about these people. As a historic book, there are better options.
So you could say it's a great additional read after, let's say, Frederick Taylor. But if you've, like me, just read Taylor there's a lot of stuf you already know.
I don't know. It was okay but it wasn't perfect.
Regardless, it's powefull stuff. As with the other books i've read about the wall, the accounts of the fall still give me goosebumbs. Such a powerfull and emotional moment. Even more so when looked at through the eyes of these people who were there.