by Harald Jähner ; translated by Shaun Whiteside ; read by Rob Shapiro ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 11, 2022
Postwar Germany has been closely examined in several recent audiobook histories, and this one is particularly well told. The Nazi defeat as much as its rise offers lessons that every new generation needs to learn--and remember. Narrator Rob Shapiro is an agreeable voice for this assignment, steady and temperate and precise. Like the author, Shapiro maintains a calculated objectivity and distance, for example, in describing how many active Nazis held onto their posts after the war. It's the mind of the German people--of human nature itself, really--that's under examination here: sorting out the rubble of their bombed houses by size, quickly forgetting they had ever been Nazis.
Pub Date: Jan. 11, 2022
Duration: 12 hrs, 30 mins
DD ISBN: 9780593454220
Publisher: Random House Audio
Review Posted Online: Jan. 22, 2026
by Ian Buruma ; read by Ian Buruma ‧ RELEASE DATE: yesterday
Buruma’s subtle and effective narration style is essential to this chronicle.
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Bard College historian Buruma has a personal link to WWII-era Berliners, his Dutch father having been a forced laborer in wartime Berlin. Buruma’s account highlights instances of the survival and rescue of Jews and of the Berlin residents who came forward to assist them. But of most Berliners, he says, “Their main aim was to stay out of trouble.” Buruma’s performance as both historian and narrator is a model of restraint and reliance on fact. He shapes a powerful narrative around Germany’s defeat at Stalingrad and year-by-year shifts in civilian morale. As deprivation and disillusion with the Nazi regime set in, the struggle for survival extended to all Berliners.
Buruma’s subtle and effective narration style is essential to this chronicle.Pub Date: yesterday
Duration: 12 hrs, 15 mins
DD ISBN: 9798217282210
Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio
Review Posted Online: March 16, 2026
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2026
by Christopher Clark ; read by Vidish Athavale ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 10, 2026
A hint of hijinks in sleepy Königsberg sets ears ablaze.
The obscure uproar so vividly portrayed in this brief audiobook couldn’t be farther from today’s media commotions—or nearer. This “small vortex of turbulence” sounds like a stage farce: It’s set in backwater Königsberg, capital of East Prussia, in the 1830s, during the lull between the Napoleonic wars and the 1848 Revolution. Take a preposterous but compelling religious cult and two guileless but strikingly handsome Lutheran clergymen, add only a hint of fornication, and gossip does the rest. Vidish Athavale’s measured, finely nuanced narration gives edge and authority to a narrative without a wasted word or useless detail. And he clearly relishes the polysyllabic 19th-century German names.
A hint of hijinks in sleepy Königsberg sets ears ablaze.Pub Date: March 10, 2026
Duration: 4 hrs, 45 mins
DD ISBN: 9798217282234
Publisher: Penguin Audio
Review Posted Online: March 10, 2026
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2026
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