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Love in a Time of Hate: Art and Passion in the Shadow of War Hardcover – September 19, 2023
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An ingeniously orchestrated popular history brings to life the most pivotal decade of the twentieth century
As the Roaring Twenties wind down, Jean-Paul Sartre waits in a Paris café for a first date with Simone de Beauvoir, who never shows. Marlene Dietrich slips away from a loveless marriage to cruise the dive bars of Berlin. The fledgling writer Vladimir Nabokov places a freshly netted butterfly at the end of his wife’s bed. Hannah Arendt, Walter Benjamin, Zelda and Scott, Dalí and Gala, Picasso and his many muses, Henry and June and Anaïs Nin, the entire extended family of Thomas Mann, and a host of other fascinating and famous figures make art and love, write and row, bed and wed and betray. They do not yet know that they, along with millions of others, will soon be forced to contemplate flight—or fight—as the world careens from one global conflict to the next.
- Print length368 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRiverhead Books
- Publication dateSeptember 19, 2023
- Dimensions6.22 x 1.2 x 9.29 inches
- ISBN-100593713931
- ISBN-13978-0593713938
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“An enthralling and insightful cultural history—one that shows how, over the course of one pivotal decade, love, freedom and the freedom to love gave way to fear, madness and despair. . . . Each piece in the book’s mosaic-like structure glints brilliantly.” —Malcolm Forbes, Washington Post Book Review
“A high-speed panoramic tour of the romantic and creative lives of Europe’s celebrity artists over the prewar decade … [in] a hyper-mobile frieze of lovemaking and art-making against darkening skies. … The narrative picks up weight and urgency as fascism imperils [Illies’s]is luminaries, body and soul.” ―Financial Times
“A kaleidoscopic romp through the decades that preceded World War II. … As the culture of Europe shifts away from experimentation and play toward large-scale social collapse, the author wrestles with how easily — and disconcertingly — hate can take over a population.” ―Vulture
“A kaleidoscopic view of a fevered decade. . . . [that] creates a sense of immediacy and tension. . . . Illies vividly captures his subjects’ disorientation, dizziness, fear, and desperation. . . . A dramatic, richly detailed cultural history.” ―Kirkus Reviews
“Florian Illies has pieced together the emotional history of a doomed generation. … Wickedly amusing until the Nazis first reprove the libertines and then set about exterminating them … which gives [this] book a disturbing relevance.” ―The Observer
“Ten years ago, Illies had a great success with 1913, which anatomised the year preceding the First World War. His grander task here enfolds the entire decade before the Second. It tells of how, as became clear to everyone from the blighted Fitzgeralds to any number of wandering Jewish intellectuals, ‘the Thirties are picking up the tab for the Twenties.’. … There’s the thrill of discovery on every page.” ―Telegraph
“It takes a skilful hand to arrange these vignettes into a dramatic image of the world slipping into catastrophe. ... Intimate relationships make for great material, now blending into, now contrasting with, the storm clouds on the horizon. … Illies reads his protagonists’ feelings, love included, like a social barometer. … A crucial perspective on ‘those blazing years before everything goes dark’.” ―The Spectator
“Love in a Time of Hate invites us to consider that history is as much an accretion of small gestures as it is a catalogue of battles and speeches. At once intimate and epic, this dazzling book illuminates the human desire to seek connection and coherence as the world descends into chaos. A brilliant and imaginative tour de force.” ―Rebecca Donner, author of All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days: The True Story of the American Woman at the Heart of the German Resistance to Hitler
“This is candid, unsparing and gripping social history. A bravura performance.” ―Harald Jähner, author of Aftermath: Life in the Fallout of the Third Reich
“Set against the relentless rise of Nazi terror, this ingenious narrative evokes the 1930s through the loves, foibles, and tragedies of the cultural elite. Strikingly original, utterly absorbing.”―Julia Boyd, author of Travelers in the Third Reich: The Rise of Fascism 1919-1945
Praise for 1913: The Year before the Storm:
“Utterly delicious … a sexy, comic and occasionally heartbreaking soap opera.”—The Washington Post
“Illies is as astute a researcher as he is an observer of the zeitgeist” ―Guardian
“A vivid, richly textured book that chronicles a world crackling with talent, energy and foreboding.”— Financial Times
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About the Author
Simon Pare is a translator from French and German who lives near Zurich. His translation of The Flying Mountain by Christoph Ransmayr made the Man Booker International Prize longlist in 2018, and he was part of the team that translated The Panama Papers into English.
Product details
- Publisher : Riverhead Books (September 19, 2023)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 368 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0593713931
- ISBN-13 : 978-0593713938
- Item Weight : 1.24 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.22 x 1.2 x 9.29 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #579,961 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #679 in Historical British Biographies
- #775 in England History
- #2,747 in Author Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
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1933, the crisis.
1934, the after.
And the dozens of artists, writers, musicians, thinkers, and lovers who are caught in the tides of history.
Love in a Time of Hate took me on a nightmare journey from the free-wheeling 1920s and the birth of the modern age to the rise of Nazi Germany and the mass immigration fleeing the country to the sad aftermath for so many: concentration camps, exile, suicide, addiction, homelessness, love found and lost, careers and possessions and financial security lost.
The individual stories are chaotic, presented piecemeal, the book flitting from one couple to another, as episodic as their love affairs. More than their accomplishments, it is their sexual adventures that are the focus–the “passion.” The men insisting on sexual freedom, the fluid sexual identity, the women avoiding motherhood through abortions, the marriages of convenience, the bisexual and homosexual and fear of sex. Who can keep it all straight? Marlene Dietrich’s serpentine and convoluted love life alone makes the mind boggle.
The hate is also in forefront, for it is the impetus for the mass migration of Germans, the fear and the loss.
It’s not an approach for everyone, but the overall impact of the book is a big picture view of this historical period through the lives of the most famous people of the time.
Thanks to the publisher for a free book.
The German author, Florian Illies, stiches together a book derived of the memoirs, biographies, and letters of bold-faced names of the era. There is little context given here amidst a writing style that jumps around rather than flows. Throughout, Illies seems to delight in exposing bedroom antics and convoluted sexual relationships.
A potential reader of this effort would be better off buying a book by Vladmir Nabokov, Joseph Roth, or Franz Hessel. Or viewing the art of Max Beckmann or Otto Dix. Or seeing "The Blue Angel" starring Marlene Dietrich.







