Escape From Leipzig
B**R
A Future Scientist Escapes East Germany
This book gives the reader a fine description of the difficulties of living in, studying in and escaping from East Germany. It provides a first-hand account of the distruction of ancient St. Paul's church in Leipzig by the GDR, a historic church that figures in the life of J. S. Bach and other German musicians. (St. Paul's is currently being rebuilt by the German government.) The political prank protesting the church's distruction by the government, which the author and a friend pull off during a Bach performance awards ceremony, is clever and effective, but soon makes the author and another friend decide to leave East Germany by folding boat across the Black Sea(!). Their escape would make a very exciting movie. The book was written by a German scientist, translated by another German scientist, and consequently has a number of interesting German-English passages which provide a nice conversational flavor. I enjoyed it.
B**E
Five Stars
Great read. A look into a Socialist world many of us here in the west cannot imagine.
J**S
Courageous Story, Uninspired Writing/Translation
Escape from Leipzig is a story of a courageous demonstration of protest over the E. German destruction of a cathedral in Leipzig, and the subsequent escape of the protester-student to W. Germany, where he became an honored academic and advisor to the W. German government.Unfortunately, the hardback book is short(125pp.), competently if ineloquently translated from the original German, and outrageously overpriced at $40!!
J**O
Good look back at East Eurpoean Communism
It was an iteresting story and recalled memories of the way of life that I observed in Eastern Europe during the communist era.
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