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The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany [Hardcover]

Michael Gorra (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 29, 2004

Nobody writes travelogues about Germany. The country spurs many anxious volumes of investigative reporting--books that worry away at the "German problem," World War II, the legacy of the Holocaust, the Wall, reunification, and the connections between them. But not travel books, not the free-ranging and impressionistic works of literary nonfiction we associate with V. S. Naipaul and Bruce Chatwin. What is it about Germany and the travel book that puts them seemingly at odds? With one foot in the library and one on the street, Michael Gorra offers both an answer to this question and his own traveler's tale of Germany.

Gorra uses Goethe's account of his Italian journey as a model for testing the traveler's response to Germany today, and he subjects the shopping arcades of contemporary German cities to the terms of Benjamin's Arcades project. He reads post-Wende Berlin through the novels of Theodor Fontane, examines the role of figurative language, and enlists W. G. Sebald as a guide to the place of fragments and digressions in travel writing.

Replete with the flaneur's chance discoveries--and rich in the delights of the enduring and the ephemeral, of architecture and flood--The Bells in Their Silence offers that rare traveler's tale of Germany while testing the very limits of the travel narrative as a literary form.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Gorra, a Smith College English professor, first visited Germany in 1993, when he was invited to give a lecture. He was taken aback at how much he liked the country, and how interesting he found it. "I was startled to find I was enjoying myself, startled because once you get past the idea of Oktoberfest, the words ‘enjoy’ and ‘Germany’ don’t, for an American, seem to belong together." This unlikely travelogue explores the nuances of Gorra’s social, cultural and even monetary exchanges. The author’s accounts illustrate his hypothesis that our American memory of WWII still informs our relationship with contemporary Germany. In one episode, Gorra finds himself at a customs office, struggling with the language and trying to retrieve a damaged parcel from the U.S. "I was given a knife and asked to open it. Books. And on top, the very first volume that both the customs official and I saw, was Hitler’s Willing Executioners.... I felt vaguely embarrassed about it, as if the book’s appearance at the top of the box had confirmed the German stereotype about the American stereotype of Germans." Gorra is most successful in these moments of surprise and sometimes even shame. Other times, the book feels burdened by references to scores of other writers and philosophers and reads more like an academic text than insightful travel writing.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Gorra's introspective, impressionistic account of his travels through Germany is shaped--perhaps even haunted--by figures from the past: historical, literary, personal. His musings on Weimar, for example, are shaded by both Goethe's oak and the nearby woods, Buchenwald, and the way in which their mutual presence mediates the visitor's experience. Lubeck and the Hanseatic north are untangled with the help of, among copious others, Thomas Mann, Walter Benjamin, Italo Calvino, and W. G. Sebald. Few travelogues are as literary, and even fewer as self-conscious about the aspirations and failures of travelogues in general. Yet for all his erudition, Gorra enters the deep waters of German cultural memory a humble, inquisitive novice, weaving personal and literary experiences, always uber-aware of Germany as the foreign, the cultural Other, no stranger to malevolence. Seasoned Germanophiles may well raise their eyebrows, but by journey's end, they will likely also be reminded of what they found so fascinating about Germany in the first place. A captivating, unique work of synthesis, this selection will draw readers back to the library, bibliography in hand. Brendan Driscoll
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (March 29, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691117659
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691117652
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,327,835 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a literary tour of Germany, June 18, 2004
This review is from: The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany (Hardcover)
Nobody writes travelogues about Germany," writes Michael Gorra at the beginning of his book "The Bells in their Silence: Travels through Germany." Indeed Germany has, in recent years, failed to inspire travel writing as sophisticated as that of Jan Morris or as candidly humorous as that Bill Bryson, a fact that makes Gorra's book a welcome addition to the genre. But after making such a statement, Gorra acknowledges the many writers who have travelled Germany before him, those who tried to makes sense of the country by seeking the marrow of the German culture beyond Lederhosen and the occasional oompah band.

A book that itself sometimes lingers too long in the past, "The Bells in their Silence" is an erudite rendering of the year the author spent living and travelling with his wife in the port city Hamburg and across northern and eastern Germany. Not a professed Germanophile, Gorra's distanced approach to Germany as well as his initial mistrust of the possibility of writing a travel book about the country are grounded in his understanding that travel writing itself is for amateurs seeking impression - and that those who choose to write about Germany are journalists. But once he gets past this initial barrier, Gorra has a keen eye, one that is guided by the extensive reading he did to prepare himself for his journey.

When the author isn't bemusing cultural differences and delighting in the small moments of daily life, he takes his reader on a literary tour of Germany from Goethe through Fontane and Thomas Mann. An English professor at Smith College, Gorra is a frequent reviewer for the New York Times Book Review. He is a traveller whose understanding of people and place is indebted to literature. Weimar can only be understood through Goethe - and the commercialization of the 19th century renaissance man that bloomed when the city was Europe's cultural capital in 1999. The Berlin that fascinates Gorra is colored by Theodor Fontane's Prussian Berlin, before, as historian Michael Wise writes, the "country's past rendered patriotism suspect." Towards the end of the book, his most touching and personal chapter concludes with a glimpse into the place that Thomas Mann's family saga "Buddenbrooks" has held in his life.

As a cultural investigator, Gorra is at his best in a chapter called "Hauptstadt," in which he dissects the peculiarities of the German capital. "Take the subway," he writes, "and mole your way beneath the city, dropping down into darkness and popping up again in a street that doesn't match the one you left behind, into rain you didn't know was happening, a view that seems suddenly all park, or all slum." When writing about Berlin's "big footprint," Gorra must have recognized that like Christopher Isherwood in the 1920's - whose "Berlin Stories" inspired the film "Cabaret" - he was viewing a city in full transition. He visited the German capital in 1993 and then again in the late 1990's, a brief few years that saw Berlin's Mitte district rise up as a cultural hotspot and when the city's edginess began to draw the country's artists to its empty factories and abandoned apartment complexes.

An appendix to the book - including works both literary and historical - is without a doubt one of the greatest boons of the book, for Gorra has selected a way to approach Germany without having to speak German. And it is appropriate that he chooses to settle into his daily rhythms in the very areas that are less often known to attract tourists seeking old world charm, cities that were left mere shells and rebuilt in a new aesthetic after the Second World War, cities that bare their scars openly but not proudly. Gorra seeks out those old wounds and dissects what they may mean for Germans and visitors to Germany today.

But if Gorra often falls into the same questioning that has defined the "German problem" for over half a century, he also displays a profound sympathy for the German people and the burden they carry as the children and grandchildren of Nazi Germany. The title he chose for his book doesn't come into play until the last chapter, when he visits Luebeck's Marienkirche, where a pair of bells lay destroyed in a courtyard as a testament to the tragedy of war. "But what, exactly, does it remember?" he asks. "Does is commemorate what Luebeck itself suffered, or does it mark the suffering of war in general? Does it tell the city that "this was done to us by them," or does it perhaps declare that "this is what we brought upon ourselves?" ... maybe it simply says that these particular and much-loved bells used to ring, and now can't." These lines are among the last resounding notes in an excellent investigation of Germany that might have been more colorful with more anecdotal insight into the Germans he met.

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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Profound Civility, June 1, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful travel book, and a great deal more than a travel book. Gorra spends a year in Germany exploring not only the present but the presence of the past, from Goethe's Germany of the poets and the thinkers to the great darkness of World War II. As anyone who has read Gorra's many reviews in "The New York Times" and other places would expect, the writing is elegant and the cultural observation shrewd. But the book goes beyond elegance and shrewdness to dignity and compassion. It exemplifies what, at its most profound, civility can bring to our understanding of even so terrible a trauma as Nazism. Like Germany itself, Gorra is haunted by that trauma, yet the range of his experiences, and of the reading he weaves into his travels, is wide. I especially loved the chapter on Thomas Mann's "Buddenbrooks," in which Gorra tells the story of his own family, Lebanese immigrants to Connecticut who became fruit and vegetable wholesalers. It's a grand way to read "Buddenbrooks," making Mann's family chronicle resonate with contemporary American life in new and varied ways.
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Literary Tour De Force, May 6, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Bells in Their Silence: Travels through Germany (Hardcover)
As a reader, Michael Gorra is erudite and generous. This is the conclusion you reach if you read his reviews in the New York Times, TLS, and other places. The Bells in their Silence, an unusual literary tour of Germany, demonstrates those qualities in abundance. But there's also more to enjoy here, a sense of movement and place, as well as a broader range of tone and perceptions, which combine to make this book more than either an academic exercise or simply a writer's report on a journey.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Hamburg, Hannover, Gottingen, and Kassel. There were other trains: the tracks to the dull marshy west toward Bremen and Osnabruck ( change for Amsterdam), or the maddeningly slow and infrequent service to Berlin, whose cars were always crowded with students. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Leigh Fermor, Second World War, Anna Amalia, Checkpoint Charlie, Cold War, East Germany, Frau Schulze, Karl August, The Arcades Project, Bank Street, Brandenburg Gate, Henry James, Mark Brandenburg, The Hamburg Firestorm, Third Reich, Thomas Buddenbrook, Blue Guide, Effi Briest, George Eliot, Goethe Oak, James Young, Jefferson Avenue, Jonathan Raban, Null Stunde, Thomas Mann
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