Book description
For almost three decades, the Cold War was focused on Berlin, where
the two (nuclear-armed) sides were kept apart by a twelve-foot wall,
which had appeared almost overnight in August 1961. For a generation,
until its fall in November 1989, it not only divided the city of
Berlin, but also symbolised the confrontation between capitalist West
and socialist East. In this astonishing book, journalist Christopher
Hilton has collected together the individual stories of those whose
lives it affected, including international politicians, American and
British soldiers, East German border guards and, most importantly, the
citizens of Berlin itself, West and East. Weaving their memories
together into a remarkable narrative, this is the extraordinarily
vivid, occasionally harrowing and often touching story of a city
divided, and of how it affected the lives of real people.