Autorenbild.

Thomas Harding (1) (1968–)

Autor von Hanns und Rudolf

Andere Autoren mit dem Namen Thomas Harding findest Du auf der Unterscheidungs-Seite.

8 Werke 902 Mitglieder 47 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

Thomas Harding is a former documentary filmmaker and journalist who has written for the Financial Times and The Guardian, among other publications. He founded a television station in Oxford, England, and for many years was an award-winning publisher of a newspaper in West Virginia. He lives in mehr anzeigen Hampshire, England. weniger anzeigen
Bildnachweis: wikimediacommons/poetsstone

Werke von Thomas Harding

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1968
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
UK
Geburtsort
London, England, UK

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

In 1927 Thomas Harding’s great-grandfather built a weekend cottage for his family on the shore of a lake in Groß Glienicke, on the western edge of Berlin. The Alexanders were able to enjoy the house for a few years before Hitler’s anti-Jewish policies made them emigrate to Britain. Another family, the Meisels, then acquired the place cheaply as “abandoned Jewish property”, but lost it again when it became part of the Soviet Zone and later the DDR. Two further families lived in the house during the DDR period, when it changed from dacha to permanent residence — but with the peculiarity that the Berlin Wall now ran through the back garden, cutting the house off from the lake.

Harding went to Berlin in 2013 to look for the now-abandoned house his relatives had talked about, and to research its history by talking to residents of Groß Glienicke, an exercise which culminated in a project to turn the house into a protected monument and eventually a museum of local history.

Harding uses a mixture of oral history and documents to chronicle the history of the house and the village from the 1890s, before the local landowner sold off portions of his estate for housing, right through to the campaign to restore the house. This is all quite engaging, particularly because Harding treats all the people who have lived in the house with equal respect and focuses on their experience of living there rather than allowing himself to be tempted into recriminations about strangers living in the house his family built for themselves. We get a lively — albeit somewhat arbitrary — slice of German social history through time, with quite a lot of interesting details.

The book is a little less successful when Harding is trying to fill us in on the bigger picture of German history to give a context to the events: inevitably, he has to condense and simplify, and he often ends up with a story that is lacking in nuance and precision. A lot of relevant information is banished to the (ridiculously long) endnotes, and Penguin make things worse by not allowing him to put references to the notes in the text: you have to guess which passages might have notes attached to them and which don’t.

Not bad on the whole, but I think there are much more interesting books about German history written by actual Germans (OK, Australians too…).
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
thorold | 18 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 11, 2024 |
Sympathiek voorbeeld van microgeschiedenis: aan de hand van een huisje in de buurt van Berlijn, eigenlijk niet meer dan een houten buitenverblijf aan het Glienicke Meer, wordt de tumultueuze geschiedenis van Duitsland geschetst, van 1890 tot 2014. De auteur is zelf een telg van de joodse familie Alexander die het huisje bouwde, maar in 1936 naar het Verenigd Koninkrijk vluchtte (en hun naam in Harding veranderde). Hij combineert het verslag van de opeenvolgende families die het huisje bewoonden, met zijn eigen pogingen om het gebouw van de sloop te redden en er een plaats van herinnering van te maken . Uiteraard komt de Nazi-periode uitgebreid in beeld, maar ook de Sovjetbezetting, tot en met de val van de Berlijnse Muur (die stond op 20 meter van het huisje), en de periode erna. Voor zo ver ik kan inschatten doet Harding dat op heel evenwichtige wijze, met veel ooggetuigenverslagen en uittreksels uit documenten, allemaal erg vlot geschreven. Een knappe prestatie, en inderdaad, het Alexander Haus is een verhaal van hoop.… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
bookomaniac | 18 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 30, 2024 |
Surely one of the best books I have read--like a thriller, but an appallingly all too real story. A magnificent achievement.
 
Gekennzeichnet
fmclellan | 23 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 23, 2024 |
Anyone who reads British novels, knows the name of Lyons and the famous Lyons Tea and Corner Houses that were once ubiquitous in Great Britain. Now, however, the name has largely disappeared. What Happened? That’s what this book is all about.

The story starts in the early 800’s with Lehmann Gluckstein and his family escaping the pogroms in Eastern Europe and emigrating to the East End of London. There by dint of hard work, the family starts pulling themselves out of poverty by selling tobacco and then branching out into catering and
Restaurants.

For over a century J. Lyons was everywhere and their products were in every home. But times and tastes change and a new generation’s poor decisions brought the company to ruin. This is a fascinating story, not only of a family business, but also of England from the Victorian era up until today.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
etxgardener | Jun 3, 2022 |

Listen

Auszeichnungen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Britta Teckentrup Illustrator

Statistikseite

Werke
8
Mitglieder
902
Beliebtheit
#28,436
Bewertung
4.0
Rezensionen
47
ISBNs
99
Sprachen
11
Favoriten
1

Diagramme & Grafiken