Beyond the Wall cover art

Beyond the Wall

East Germany, 1949-1990

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Beyond the Wall

By: Katja Hoyer
Narrated by: Sam Peter Jackson
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

Longlisted for The Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction 2023.

The definitive new history of East Germany by an acclaimed historian

In 1990, a country disappeared. For the previous forty-one years, East Germany had existed in Western minds as more of a metaphor than a place, more of a grey communist blur than a land of real people with friends and families, workplaces and homes. As Germany once again became a single state, the history of the GDR was simplified and politicised. It was nothing but Stasi spies and central planning, nothing but a wall in Berlin.

In Beyond the Wall, acclaimed historian Katja Hoyer looks past these outdated conceptions and toward a more comprehensive history, one that acknowledges border guards, secret police and brutal repression, as well as comprehensive welfare, unprecedented gender equality, and the deconstruction of class privilege. There were those who were silenced, she argues, and also those who felt they had been given a voice for the first time. Both deserve to be heard today.

Based on first-hand accounts and extensive new research, Hoyer presents the history of the GDR as never before—as a kaleidoscope of perspectives, experiences and stories. From the ashes of the Second World War to the fall of the USSR, this is the definitive story of the other Germany, the one beyond the Wall.

©2023 Katja Hoyer (P)2023 Penguin Audio
20th Century Eastern Europe Modern Politics & Government Socialism Soviet Union Imperialism Thought-Provoking Inspiring War Russia Stalin Military Capitalism Cold War

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This is a totally engrossing story of a country that lived and breathed for 40 years and suddenly ceased to exist. Brilliantly written and narrated, many episodes will linger in my brain for years to cone.

Colourful and unforgettable

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This history of East Germany is so interesting because Katja Hoyer grew up there but seems to have no ideological biases about the country. She recounts the repression, the failures of state planning and the horrors of the Berlin Wall. But, she also reports on the extraordinary gender equality, the subsidised rents and child care, the early economic successes and the surprising space for some kinds of protest. Overall, I could see why so many tried to escape but also why so many in the current Eastern länder miss some aspects of life in the German Democratic Republic. I learned a lot.

In an audiobook, the narrator matters almost as much as the author. The narrator here obviously speaks excellent German (or is fully bilingual) but also reads extremely well without amateur dramatics but with feeling and engagement. A great job

Balanced, fascinating and memorable

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I first visited East Berlin in 1978 and returned on the night of Reunification. This book helps explain what I saw and the changes in between.
Importantly it also frames East Germans far less as victims and more as people who were (are) proud of their homeland despite being locked in.
Equally important is the light the book shins on the present day attitudes of a significant minority of German voters to Russia.
The book is very well written by a very talented historian and deserves to be widely read. I will certainly re-read it.

An illuminating history of a poorly understood place and time in history

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Great content. Maybe break the large chapters into the sections within for easier reference

fascinating story from and under represented group

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I wish I had this back in the 80’s to help understand the DDR.

Excellent account of the old DDR

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I found this book to be a very fair and level headed account of the DDR and it's legacy. I worked there for a short while, and the authors account makes sense in terms of what I heard from GDR citizens, and experienced personally in the early 1980s. The crucial point the author makes is that this entire country, with it's achievements, and it's sins, can not be written off as simply a "departure from normality". The creation and building of the society that emerged in the GDR is worthy of respect, acknowledgement, and an understanding of the geopolitical context in which it emerged and developed. I empathise with the authors criticisms of the many utterly unacceptable aspects of the governance of the DDR. I also found myself in agreement with her warm appreciation of the very many humane and civilised aspects of the vast majority of people of the DDR, which left a deep impression with me also. Whether the latter emerged, despite or because of the system, I do not know. I suspect it was a combination of the two. The author succeeded, in my opinion, in producing an insightful and balanced account, which I would highly recommend to anyone who may wish to go beyond the clichés and half truths which abound in almost all coverage of "East Germany".

An Entirely Fair and Level Headed Account

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Well researched book into the history of a forgotten part overlooked section of German history. A great start a book for anyone getting into not so much the Cold War, but how the east German population lived.

A great insight

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I have the same background as the author and what I read so far is so well written and researched that I think this could be the ultimate reference for anyone interested in the GDR. It

I am not even halfway through and I love it!

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This book was so long it took me weeks to listen to, however I really enjoyed it. It shines a light on how East Germany was and the way they lived, it paints a new picture not all the doomed and gloom that was portraid to me as a youngster.

Really enjoyed. well researched

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This book delves into the history of East Germany from political, industrial, cultural and personal angles, and gives a fuller understanding of life beyond the wall and a brief look at the dificulties that came after its fall. Fantastic listen. German initialisms etc. could have been read in English though.

Fascinating multi-faceted dive into the GDR

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