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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Book that touches You, December 6, 2000
I read Joel Agee's book "Twelve Years. An American Boyhood in East Germany" in German and in English and tried very hard to get a used copy of his first american edition - without any success. Finally, he is back again with a new edition, and allthough my english is not as good as it should be, I just want to write down some words abaout this book. For me who always lived in Western Germany it is one of the most interesting books about the communist part of Germany, the GDR (in german it's DDR). It was not meant to be a political book, but it has become one anyhow. The reader is not only enabled to follow a very private story of growing up as a boy (including all the problems most man - since they have been boys - know and prefer not to talk about it), but to understand how culture and everyday life had been transformed by the communist ideology in a way that could be critizised only by children: some simply laughed about it and learned, that even only to laugh could have negative consequences. And getting some idea of how adults did discuss the political penetration of everyday life makes you feel glad to be grown up in a non communist state - but still you can understand that this adults they had their living like others had, and that they were fathers and mothers having everyday problems like others had. This book indeed touched and pleased me. It is a marvellous written autobiographical kind of literature. If you'll read it, it will take a part of your heart and your intellect to. You'll have to love it.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Two wonderful books, June 28, 2000
This is a timely reprint of the author's fascinating recollections of his youth spent from 1948 to 1960 in East Germany.

Together with his mother and his younger brother, the son of a famous American writer followed her second husband, his stepfather, a well-known communist German writer, from his exile in Mexico to East Germany. The circumstances were peculiar, yet the faithfulness to memory and the facts, and the careful choice of language make this book a wonderfully personal and universal piece of literature, capturing `atmosphere, conflicts, and hopes' of adolescence and life in an ideologized society of the Cold War Era.

Interesting complementary reading: `Always Straight Ahead : A Memoir' by Alma Neuman (Joel Agee's mother)

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully Written Memoir, February 21, 2005
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This review is from: Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany (Hardcover)
"Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany" is a fascinating memoir. Eight-year-old Joel Agee was brought by his mother and stepfather to the Soviet zone of Germany (what would become East Germany) in 1948 and lived there for the next 12 years. As Agee's stepfather, Bodo Uhse, was a prominent Communist, Agee had the best that East Germany could offer: a villa with servants, summers at the Baltic Sea, and numerous opportunities to recover from his dismal performance at school. Agee does provide an insight as to how the Communist intelligentsia in that country thought -- their explanations for the closed border, their view of the Stalinist (and Soviet-bloc) purges in the early 50s, and their conflicting views of Khruschev's revelations. This memoir is also a coming-of-age story, filled with teenage angst and sexual frustration. What distinguishes this from many other memoirs is that it is exceptionally well-written. Although Agee was never able to get his bearings in the East German school system (or was, as we would say today, a "slacker") his descriptions are almost poetic. Well worth reading.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An American Manhood, December 2, 2000
By 
Louis Menashe (Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
I'm delighted to see that Joel Agee's memoir is now available again, and I look forward, with pleasure, to re-reading it. In beautiful prose, Agee not only reveals the pains and pleasures of his growing up (it could be anywhere), but gives us a portrait, from an unusual angle, of life in the newly formed German Democratic Republic, i.e.,communist East Germany, during the period 1948-1960. The historian will find the book of particular interest, but so will anyone else who enjoys entering the unsual world of a sensitive young man with a terrific eye for detail, and who is frank about his inner life.

Agee returned to the U.S. just as the amazing 60s were about to roll their thunder, and I can't wait to read his follow-up memoir, his "American Manhood" in another world far removed from the East Berlin of his youth.

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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow!.....This book brought back memories...., November 4, 2002
By 
Erich Dieter Groebe (Springfield, Missouri United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany (Hardcover)
I too have been urged by friends to write a book about my youth. In 1981, at the age of 18, I decided to reunite with my father and immigrated from the USA to the DDR. I was later expelled in 1986 for political reasons and lived elsewhere in Europe until my return in 1991 following the Fall of The Berlin Wall. I remained there until April of 2000 at which time I returned to the USA.
This book brought back some memories despite the difference in time. (The Author went to the DDR in 1948 at the age of 8. I went to the DDR in 1981 at the age of 18) I had no idea that there had been any other Americans that shared an even remotely similar story and Joel Agee does a great job of telling his story with far more emotion and prose than I ever could.
The book is a wonderful insight into life in a country that no longer exists...from the view point of an American child/young adult. I especially recommend it to anyone who has grown-up or lived in a country where they felt they did not belong. In my opinion, Agee entered the DDR in its infancy and left just as its darkest period began. I entered The DDR at the height of the Reagan Era and witnessed its collapse from within. Two historic phases. I only wish that both of us could have witnessed more.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hilarious and Universal Coming of Age Account, February 17, 2008
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Joel Agee's Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany offers a hilarious and universal account of the passage from boyhood to manhood. Enjoying this book does not require an interest in its unique setting. Never mind that the entire work occurs between 1948 and 1960 in the Stalinist dictatorship of the German (un)Democratic Republic; or that the author's Jewish American mother is living with her children and second husband in the anti-fascist Soviet Satellite of the only recently vanquished Third Reich; or that the author's biological father is Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, James Agee; or that his stepfather is an East German writer whose socialist themes become less relevant the more the dictatorship he lives in takes hold. Joel Agee so powerfully conveys the challenging and exciting passage of a male from age eight to twenty, that distinctions of place, time, name, and circumstance meld into a broader truth.

By page thirteen, the book's ever more ironic and outrageously funny form takes shape -- the fibs to Mom, friendship mischief, the struggle to fit in with peer groups, and the stirrings of sexual awakening that should have long ago made this work a classic.


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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Russians next door, April 28, 2009
By 
Felixa: "kafesialel" (Santa Barbara, California United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany (Hardcover)
This review would rate 5 stars, had it not been so obviously a young boy's story, in my case, being an American woman but formerly a German girl, it lacks universality. In Agee's quest for sex, he teases, but never fulfills his desires with anyone, that maybe reality, but then he should not tease the reader. The food scenes were amazing to me, who lived in West Berlin and whenever I was able to supplied my brother in East Berlin with chocolate and other food items that they, in the East, could not get. But yes, it did open my eyes as to the differences between East and West, and the Communist elite and ordinary Soviet block citizens. My mother's friend had been a Communist in danger of being discovered under Hitler, and after the war moved to East Berlin. She was feted and brought to the Soviet Union to paint Shostakovitch. But even she, a famous comrade and a favorite student of Kaethe Kollwitz did not get the extra rations and favors the family of Bodo Uhse, Joel Agee's stepfather received. I do wonder if his memory deceives him in part. At least when he was in boarding school, the food would have been grim, as it was for my half-brothers in the DDR. But aside from these squabbles, it is a wonderfully written book, with many lyrical passages. One is often reminded in these pages, that the Russians were next door, and their tanks could have overrun the rest of Germany and then Europe at any time.
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Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany
Twelve Years: An American Boyhood in East Germany by Joel Agee (Hardcover - May 1981)
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