Franz Hessel was born in 1880 to a Jewish banking family, and grew up in Berlin. After studying in Munich, he lived in Paris, moving in artistic circles in both cities. His relationship with the fashion journalist Helen Grund was the inspiration for Henri-Pierre Roche’s novel and, later, Francois Truffaut’s film Jules et Jim. Their son Stéphane went on to become a diplomat and author of the worldwide bestselling Indignez-Vous! (Time for Outrage!). He also co-translated Proust with Walter Benjamin, as well as works by Casanova, Stendhal, and Balzac. Franz Hessel died in early 1941, shortly after his release from an internment camp. Amanda DeMarco, is an editor, translator, and the founder of Readux Books. Originally from Chicago, she is currently based in Berlin.
‘Like a private invitation back to the city’s most beguiling era …
Irreverent and yet always enthusiastic, [Hessel’s]
88-year-old love letter to this city is a true map of the traces of
a bygone world.’
*The Observer Magazine*
‘Captures a portrait of a city on the brink of irrevocable change …
Hessel was both detailed chronicler of the present, and a man
keenly aware of the city’s history … Apt then that Walking in
Berlin now joins this historical hall of fame.’
*The Independent*
‘[Walking in Berlin] is not only an important record of old Berlin;
it is a testimony to its enduring spirit.’
*TLS*
‘An absolutely epic book, a walking remembrance.’
*Walter Benjamin*
‘Hessel’s conversational style and subtle insights evoke Weimar
Berlin and reveal a great deal about the Germany of his days.’
*The Irish Times*
‘Walking in Berlin is a magical mystery tour of a city on the brink
of upheaval. Hessel may have wandered haphazardly but he wrote with
purpose, never once losing his way.’
*Sunday Herald*
‘Hessel is a modest master of spontaneous observation.’
*Berliner Zeitung*
‘Hessel’s warm enthusiasm for his home town informs every page, and
provides the reader with a geographical guide that still holds
value, despite the enormous changes in the city. More than that,
though, it evokes a time that, although just about within living
memory, seems almost as remote as the nineteenth-century Berlin of
Schinkel.’
*Shiny New Books*
'A newly rediscovered treasure.’
*Die Welt*
‘To this day, there is no better Berlin travel guide.’
*Tagesspiegel*
‘Beautiful … a classic observation of the German city in the late
1920s that illuminates many of the historic shadows and provides a
wonderful map for modern-day wanderings.’
*Sydney Morning Herald*
‘When you think of Berlin in the 1920s, you cannot avoid thinking
of the storyteller, critic and translator Franz Hessel.’
*Manfred Papst recommends Spazieren in Berlin in
the Neue Züricher Zeitung*
‘Walking in Berlin can be read lightly as a postcard from the
past; it should be read seriously as an inexhaustible record of all
that Berlin was and might have been, as an enthralling guide to a
wealth of references, sidetracks, lost paths … This is a first
encounter with the myth and the reality of that intangible
fantastic beast of a city.’ Mika
Provata-Carlone, Bookanista
*Bookanista*
‘Hessel is a feisty, clever, and witty guide to Berlin; his prose
is animated and sumptuous and his perceptions glamorously lyrical.
For anyone who knows the geography of Berlin, this book is an
especial treat.’
*Saturday Age*
‘A timely ode to a good meander and [Hessel’s] home city
[Berlin].’
*Wanderlust*
‘Hessel’s wanderings in the Weimar-era German capital mix social
commentary with artistic and architectural analysis … his musings
offer a fresh set of eyes.’
*GQ*
‘[A] sprawling panorama of cultural memory and miscellany, a
vibrant catalog of metropolitan life, and a seismograph of a city
on the verge of disaster.’
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
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