In wartime Berlin it was possible to find every form of human behaviour, from conformity and cruelty to bravery and indifference. Using his father's memories and letters as well as a wide range of other sources, Ian Buruma has composed a brilliant account of what it felt like to be there. <b><i>Stay Alive</i> is a beautifully written account of a city under military and moral siege.</b>
- Professor Anne Applebaum, author of Autocracy Inc.
<b>Beautifully written and deeply researched</b>, <i>Stay Alive</i> is particularly haunting in showing how ordinary Germans conformed with Nazism and the persecution and deportation of their Jewish neighbours. <b>It makes a chilling warning of how people can acquiesce and look away from the worst realities.</b>
- Gary Bass, author of Judgment at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia
<b>An exceptional excursion into the multiple, contradictory lives, voices and dilemmas of Berlin's inhabitants during the Nazi war years</b>... By providing a compelling and compulsive immersion into that crucial period of history, <b>Buruma also eloquently reminds us of how, in our own time, the temptation to look away from persecution and injustice has terrifying consequences.</b>
- Ariel Dorfman, author of Death and the Maiden
<b>Ian Buruma brings to life Berlin during World War II so vividly that you can imagine yourself blithely strolling the streets of the city or hunkering down in the bomb shelters. </b>Buruma tapped a wealth of sources -- not only published memoirs, but first-hand interviews with elderly survivors and a cache of letters stored in a tin written by Buruma's own father, a forced labourer in Berlin during the war. The beauty of the book is Buruma's nuanced writing about the Germans who weighed resistance against the imperative to stay alive, and those who simply became cogs in Hitler's murderous regime.
- Barbara Demick, Samuel Johnson Prize-winning author of Nothing to Envy,
<b>Buruma draws on an abundant source of material, including letters and diaries, enriching these with interviews with wartime eyewitnesses.</b>
Kirkus (starred review)
'Wonderfully nuanced, Guardian, Book of the Day
When war broke out in September 1939, what was most striking in the German capital at first was how little changed. Unless you were Jewish. Then life, already hard, soon got unfathomably worse.
Drawing on diaries, letters and memoirs, Stay Alive chronicles daily life in wartime Berlin with extraordinary power and immediacy. Here are the movie stars and swing dancers, the resistance circles and SS patrols hunting deserters, the desperate calculations of survival and collaboration. As Allied bombs reduced the city to rubble and Soviet troops closed in, the common greeting of Berliners became not auf Wiedersehen or Heil Hitler but bleiben Sie übrig - 'Stay alive'.
Revelatory, devastating and deeply humane, this book illuminates how ordinary people navigated the moral catastrophe of the Third Reich - what it meant to resist, to conform or simply to endure. Buruma shows how a society's accommodation to evil unfolds one compromise at a time, and why understanding this descent remains urgently relevant today.