Berlin and Prague:
Nazis, Jews, stamp collectors, and beautiful women by Philip Greenspun; created 1993
Join Greenspun as he searches for traces of Jewish history among the
shell-pocked ruins of East Berlin, visits the luxurious digs of Frederick the
Great, takes a pleasure cruise past the birthplace of the Final Solution, rides
up the Elbe River valley to Prague, dates a beautiful young Czech, wrests his
bicycle from the Czech bureaucracy, tries desperately to impress two Dutch
sisters, visits the last battleground of World War II, and is trapped over
Heathrow with a New York philosopher.
You'll learn about fascinating history, beautiful architecture, and, perhaps
best of all, how ethnic strife in Europe lends perspective to problems in
America.
[
Berlin Alone |
Berlin with John |
Soviet and Turkish voices |
Up the Elbe to
Prague ]
More Options
The critics are raving about Berlin and Prague
"What is a good argument, What might be called a good description,
What is style? Unfortunately, I do not have an answer to these questions.
However, sometimes I know for sure that something is neither a good argument, nor
a good description and has definitely no style."
Dietmar J. (Freiburg, Germany)
"I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. Of course, you must know that such
compliments from lawyers are to be assessed in context. When your alternative is
reading the latest batch of CCH updates on amendments to SEC Regulations, that
isn't saying much."
Saul Fridman (professor, Australia National University)