4.0 

Berlin Shuffle

By Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz & Philip Boehm
Berlin Shuffle by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz & Philip Boehm digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A prophetic lost classic from interwar Germany, following a group of Berliners navigating economic turmoil and the rise of fascism, now translated into English for the first time

Berlin in the 1920s is the largest city in Europe, a cultural mecca, and a political mess: a hedonistic Babylon, though there’s little glamour for the hundreds of thousands out of work, the war wounded, the prostitutes, and the beggars. Come evening they too want to shed their cares at the Jolly Huntsman pub, where they gather to drink, dance, and reassert their pride.

But there’s disaster lurking in the alleys and flophouses, a disaster that the twenty-two-year-old author Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz saw coming for his nation. In this dark comedy of petty theft, soapbox speeches, and bar fights is the disarray of a country devouring itself.

Tragically, Germany’s self-destruction engulfed the author, who was killed five years after finishing this novel. When Boschwitz’s The Passenger was rediscovered in 2021, it was heralded as a masterpiece that captured the terror of the Nazi reign. Now, Berlin Shuffle—his literary debut from 1937, finally available in English, with a preface by the preeminent translator Philip Boehm—brings to life the society that would enable fascism’s takeover.

The triumph of one of world literature’s spectacular talents, Berlin Shuffle is a dire warning sent from a pivotal moment in history to our own time.

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Berlin Shuffle Reviews

4.0
“Germany in the 1920s has been memorialized for many of us in the 21st C in the musical, Cabaret, but this book while set in the same period is not a paean to the cultural flourishing of that period. Rather it’s a look an ordinary people suffering economically and confused by the political changes. Many are displaced: the war wounded, the prostitutes,the unemployed - the marginalized of that period. This is the setting for the recently translated book by Ulrich Boschwitz, a lost classic “from interwar Germany.” Drawing upon an ensemble of characters from the dregs of society, Boschwitz tells a story both comedic and tragic. He showcases the havoc and hazards of day-to-day for this marginalized by the Great War. These people are always scurrying to find money, deeply resentful of the “haves,” and questioning as in the veteran blinded in the war isn’t he owed something for having sacrificed himself? Written in 1937, the book covers one day in the lives of a ragtag group: a blind match seller, a pump, a sex worker, a former bailiff and a grieving widow who gather in the pub, the Jolly Huntsman. Interweaving vignettes from the lives of these characters, Boschwitz illustrates the effects that the war has wrought on the country and the difficulty of survival amidst the overwhelming changes these survivors must face. What for me was particularly heartbreaking was the history keeps showing how marginalized people are always discounted and disregarded. I want to thank NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for allowing me to listen to this excellently narrated audiobook.”

About Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz

Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz was born in Berlin in 1915. He fled Germany in 1935 and wrote his novels while studying at the Sorbonne in Paris. In 1939, he settled in England, but after the war broke out, England interned him as an “enemy alien”—despite his Jewish background—and shipped him to Australia. In 1942, Boschwitz was allowed to return to England, but his ship was torpedoed by a German submarine, and he was killed at the age of twenty-seven.

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