Berlin now The city after the Wall

Peter Schneider, 1940-

Book - 2014

A "longtime Berliner's ... exploration of the heterogeneous allure of this vibrant city. Delving beneath the obvious answers--Berlin's club scene, bolstered by the lack of a mandatory closing time; the artistic communities that thrive due to the relatively low (for now) cost of living--Schneider takes us on an insider's tour of this rapidly metamorphosing metropolis, where high-class soirees are held at construction sites and enterprising individuals often accomplish more without public funding--assembling a makeshift club on the banks of the Spree River--than Berlin's officials do"--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2014.
Language
English
German
Main Author
Peter Schneider, 1940- (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
vi, 326 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780374254841
  • Cinderella Berlin
  • The Great Awakening
  • Clash of the Architects
  • Potsdamer Platz
  • Berlin Schloss Versus Palace of the Republic
  • West Berlin
  • A "Wessi" Attempts to Find Berlin's Soul
  • Berlin: Emergence of a New Metropolis
  • City West Versus Capital City (East) and Vice Versa
  • Love (and Sex) in Berlin
  • Love in Divided Berlin
  • Love After the Fall of the Wall
  • Clubs
  • What Happened to the Wall Anyway?
  • The American Sector Is Leaving You
  • The Ghost of BER International Airport
  • The Stasi Legacy
  • An "Enemy of the State" Becomes Boss
  • The New Racism
  • Vietnamese in Berlin
  • Anetta Kahane and the Amadeu Antonio Foundation
  • The New Barbarism
  • Turks in Berlin
  • A Mayor Flouts Political Correctness
  • Yes, You Can: The Rütli School
  • Help, the Swabians Are Coming!
  • A Belated Cemetery Visit
  • The Man Who Gave Nefertiti Away
  • Jewish Life in Berlin
  • Spring in Berlin
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by New York Times Review

WHEN THE GERMAN WRITER Peter Schneider published "The Wall Jumper," his celebrated elliptical novella about the divided Berlin of the Cold War, in 1982, the city's central importance to the 20th century was unquestioned. First the kaiser and then the Führer had touched off world wars from Germany's capital. And when the world was split between Soviet and American blocs, Berlin could rightly claim to be the front line. The concrete barrier zigzagging through its streets stood as the tangible symbol of that division. President John F. Kennedy's 1963 Berlin speech is best remembered for the phrase "Ich bin ein Berliner," but before his indelible German declaration he said more broadly, "All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin." Caring about what happened in Berlin meant caring about what happened everywhere, lending added significance to works like "The Wall Jumper" or the Wim Wenders film "Wings of Desire." Now, 25 years after the fall of the wall, the city is once again the object of intense fascination - not because of Chancellor Angela Merkel's influence over European fiscal policies but because bohemian young people are moving to the city from every part of the globe and clubbing all night. It's Berlin as Ibiza or Cancun, but with bad weather. In "Berlin Now," Schneider seeks to explain why the city became "the capital of creative people from around the world today," attracting artists, D.J.s and software developers from Tokyo, Tel Aviv and all points in between. He also tackles the interconnected question of how, once Berlin "burst out of the shackles of reinforced concrete, barbed wire and iron bars ... the severed veins and limbs of the divided city fused back together." The most famous line from "The Wall Jumper" was Schneider's statement that "it will take us longer to tear down the wall in our heads than any wrecking company will need for the wall we can see." Indeed, Schneider finds himself following round-about routes through the reunified city defined by the path of the now absent wall, "taking the old detours. Nothing seemed more difficult to me than driving straight from west to east." He recounts the debates over how to rebuild the central but long-abandoned square known as Potsdamer Platz, and describes the fight over destroying the East German Parliament building and replacing it with a facsimile of the old Prussian palace that preceded it. Even a quarter-century after the wall's demolition, the city has a strikingly unfinished quality, full of gaps and absences. Schneider identifies "the weirdness, perpetual incompleteness and outlandishness of Berlin," not as a failing but as an attraction. A jewel of a city like Dubrovnik or Venice feels like a closed circuit, a finished book. "Imperfection, incompleteness - not to say ugliness - afford a sense of freedom that compact beauty never can," he writes. For centuries Berlin has had something of a chip on its shoulder. It lacks the ancient ruins of Rome or the sophisticated beauty of Paris. It is landlocked and flat, with a climate that can be frigid, gray and unpleasant up to eight months out of the year. "Imagine Geneva, lost in a desert," Balzac wrote in 1843, "and you have an idea of Berlin." THAT QUOTATION SURFACES in another book timed to the 25 th anniversary of the fall of the wall by the Canadian travel writer Rory MacLean. With a few exceptions, "Berlin: Portrait of a City Through the Centuries" is a series of loose biographical sketches of both famous and everyday Berliners, past and present. The very first concerns a 15th-century poet and singer, Konrad von Cölln, who was prone to debauchery. He had his tongue cut out for defying Prince-Elector Irontooth, and was then executed. MacLean sees the dualities of sex and violence, freedom and fascism as central to the city's character and its appeal. A worker in a factory kitchen inadvertently kills herself trying to induce a miscarriage by eating the tips of 160 phosphorous matches. A courtesan becomes the model for the golden angel at the top of the Siegessäule, or victory column, featured prominently in "Wings of Desire." Leni Riefenstahl, Albert Speer and Joseph Goebbels are juxtaposed with Christopher Isherwood, Marlene Dietrich and David Bowie. MacLean acknowledges Alexandra Richie's comprehensive doorstopper of Berlin history, "Faust's Metropolis" (worth the time of any dedicated student of the city's history), and his book reads at times like a breezy companion to that work. But what is real and what is not in MacLean's stories is often unclear. He tells of a Vietnamese immigrant to East Germany and in the notes writes: "The truth of the story - although not its facts - was checked by author and translator Nguyen Ngoc Bich." The British edition of the book was called "Berlin: Imagine a City," which better alerts readers to the blend of fact and fiction. Both MacLean and Schneider restore a sense of the importance of Berlin's vanished industrial might, crippled by Allied bombing, stripped by the Soviets as reparations after the war and finally starved by the wall surrounding it. The makeshift galleries and pop-up clubs of recent vintage are staged on its ruins. "The landmarks of Berlin are old gasometers and water towers, deserted hospitals, disused airports, onetime docks, vacant train stations, abandoned C.I.A. surveillance facilities and Stasi prisons," Schneider writes, "moldy bunker and tunnel complexes from two dictatorships and warehouses of all kinds." On a visit to the converted bunker of the art collector Christian Boros, Schneider recalls his own time in bunkers as a boy during the war, "the absence of sounds: the anxious silence among hundreds of women and children, loud screams when bombs strike nearby, the wait for a sign that danger has passed." Seventy years later he finds himself "unsettled" by a sound installation where microphones amplify the hum of "coldly glowing fluorescent tubes." Too often, however, Schneider settles for pontificating - on subjects ranging from the sexual differences between East and West German women to the perils posed by Muslim immigrants. He quotes a study that he says revealed "a clear relationship between Islamic piety and the propensity toward violence," and repeats a Berlin politician's assertion that "there are also Turks and Arabs who aren't stupid. It's these kids that we need to help against their parents." Schneider praises his straight talk, calling him a "natural-born tribune." One turns to MacLean for an apt rejoinder. He points out that "Berlin was never an ethnic German city. Its poor land and isolated location had made its survival dependent on incomers," citing the waves of Franks, Flemings and Rhinelanders, of Danes, Jews and Poles. Frederick the Great "even mooted building a mosque to attract Muslims, 250 years before the arrival of the first Turkish Gastarbeiter." Today, as global economies continue to sputter through the aftereffects of the Great Recession, the German capital has come to feel like a day care facility for college-educated Americans and Europeans. The nightclub lines ring with brash Spanish chatter and lilting Irish accents. Gallery openings are packed with New Yorkers playacting a vision of the city filtered through the novels of Isherwood and the music of Bowie. Most will go home, provisioned with a few outré stories to be told later, in stolid, responsible middle age. Those who remain will contribute to the city's mutable legacy and its enduring character. NICHOLAS KULISH, formerly the Berlin bureau chief for The Times, is now a correspondent in New York. His most recent book, written with Souad Mekhennet, is "The Eternal Nazi: From Mauthausen to Cairo, the Relentless Pursuit of SS Doctor Aribert Heim."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [November 2, 2014]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* The author of The Wall Jumper (1984) presents his collected musings about the city that has inspired and perplexed him since he was first seduced by West Berlin as a young man in the early 1960s. Berlin is not traditionally beautiful, he notes; it is a hodgepodge of architectural fits and starts, like the aging Fernsehturm and the ubiquitous concrete Plattenbau apartments of the old East Berlin but also the contested and commercialized new Potsdamer Platz. It is a city scarred by its history but also proud of its weirdness, its resilience, and its condition of constant change; a city in which a bitter debate over what to do with an asbestos-filled East German government building culminates in a massive piece of performance art. Berlin today struggles with racial politics and the same gentrification challenges that confront many major cities, as Schneider explores in insightful essays on the Turkish district of Neukolln and the increasingly South German streets of Prenzlauer Berg. But it is also a city that, for now at least, continues to be a magnet for the young, creative, and poor, to whom it offers cavernous apartments and an unparalleled club scene (which the author dutifully explores, having gotten from his grown children a few tips on where to go and how best to enjoy himself). In the end, Schneider seems to suggest, liveliness is far more important than beauty.--Driscoll, Brendan Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this enlightening collection of essays, Berlin resident Schneider unearths the city's charms and hazards. Journalist Schneider (Eduard's Homecoming; The Wall Jumper) first came to Berlin from Freiburg as a student in 1962 and has since seen enormous changes, the most shattering of which was the tearing down of the Berlin Wall after the earthshaking events of November 1989. Apart from the subsequent building projects that have transformed the city, such as the development of Potsdamer Platz and the shifting of the historic Mitte (middle) toward what was once East Berlin, Schneider is intensely focused on the East-versus-West dynamic. He describes East Berliners as dragging their Communist ideals and Stasi legacy, and resenting Western democratic standards, and he says that East Berlin women are "self-confident and divorce-happy," as more of them have been forced to work than their Western counterparts. Moreover, the once-ostracized Turkish "guest workers" now make up a largely assimilated minority, with Vietnamese, Russians, and Jews nestled in far-flung neighborhoods, despite lingering episodes of racist violence. Covering the city's grim history as well as its current night clubbing, these essays reveal an authentic city that does not bother being more lively than beautiful. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Berlin is a world-class city, and what makes it special-even more than the up-all-night clubs or vibrant artistic scene-is the enterprising spirit of its ever-shifting community. So says Schneider, a sometime resident who has written nearly two dozen books (e.g., The Wall Jumper) and has taught at leading universities in this country. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An intriguing journey through Berlin by a longtime interested observer. Ungainly, amorphous, overrun by armies, clotted by construction, inhabited by uneasy neighborhoods of ethnic niches (including Turks, Russians, Vietnamese and Israelis), and still affordable to starving artists and all-night partiers, Berlin is a wildly attractive tourist spot, not least due to its dark history. In these amusing, knowledgeable essays and dispatches, German novelist and journalist Schneider (Eduard's Homecoming, 2000, etc.), who first came to the city as a student in the early 1960s to claim exemption from serving in the Bundeswehr (German defense forces), unearths much that is fascinating and even beautiful about Berlin. He examines the conversion of various sections of the city and warehouses, industrial ruins and other structures in what was formerly East Berline.g., Potsdamer Platz, the new Berlin Brandenburg Airport and newly gentrified Prenzlauer Berg. Deeply engaged with friends and colleagues both East and West, Schneider has written extensively on the ramifications of the removal of the Berlin Wall, not only in the physical revelation that Berlins great historic center and grand buildings were all located in the East, but also in the souls of Ossi and Wessi remnants, now cohabitating a little like oil and water. In his autobiographical essay West Berlin (the namerefers to a city that no longer exists), the author reaches back into the student movement of the late 1960s and the building of the wall of the mind mentality he wrote about in his novelThe Wall Jumper(1984). In The Stasi Legacy, he writes poignantly of the poisonous effect the secret police had on even married couples informing on each other. Berlins culture of remembrance, he writes, has also been transformede.g., the multitude of Holocaust commemoration exhibits and memorials paying quiet tribute to a vanished community. A seasoned journalist conveys the charms and perils of this Cinderella of European capitals. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

CINDERELLA BERLIN It isn't all that easy to answer the question of why, for some time now, Berlin has been one of the most popular cities in the world. It's not on account of its beauty, for Berlin is not beautiful; Berlin is the Cinderella of European capitals. Gazing out from a roof deck here, you won't see anything like the domes of Rome, the zinc roofs of Paris, or the architectural canyons of New York. There is nothing spectacular, in any way exciting--or even atrocious--about the view. No pool on the seventy-second floor, no palm garden at a dizzying height, no penthouse casino high above the rooftops promising an exhilarating plunge from the terrace to the gambler who has just suffered an unbearable loss. What unfolds before the viewer is a homogenous cityscape of four-to-six-story buildings whose red pitched roofs didn't originally come equipped with penthouses or sumptuous roof decks. It was only thirty years ago, not long before the fall of the Wall, that West Berliners discovered that life above the city's chestnut and linden trees was significantly better than life in their shadow. Tentatively, they began to carve windows and terraces into the roofs. This is where they now dwell, at a modest height, between the occasional hotel and office high-rise, whose architecture on the whole seems to have been inspired by a shoe box stood on its end. To the west, the Eiffel Tower's little brother, known as the Funkturm (Radio Tower), rises above the sea of buildings; to the east, the 1,207-foot-tall Fernsehturm (TV Tower) glimmers on the horizon, the afternoon sunlight etching a gleaming cross into its steel sphere--much to the ire of its communist builders, who erected the tower to prove the "victoriousness of socialism." Quick-witted Berliners christened the luminous cross "the Pope's revenge." The apparition proved as intractable as it was inexplicable--nothing could be done to get rid of it. It presaged the future: the end of the German Democratic Republic. Those living in the new city center, Mitte, had to wait for Berlin's two halves to be reunified before converting their attics. Admittedly, they have the better view. They look out onto several metropolitan icons: the gilded dome of the reconstructed synagogue near Hackescher Markt and, beyond that, the Reichstag, its historical weight lightened by Sir Norman Foster's addition of a glass dome, and the restored horse-drawn chariot of the Brandenburg Gate, swept clean of the dust of the East German era. Even farther in the distance, Helmut Jahn's circus tent and the towers of Renzo Piano and Hans Kollhoff rise from what used to be Berlin's most prominent vacant lot, Potsdamer Platz. Yet, to date, no urban climber has deemed any of these new high-rises worthy of scaling. No Philippe Petit has thought to stretch a cable between the office towers at Potsdamer Platz and to balance back and forth across it. A city in which a new, 389.8-foot-tall hotel (the Waldorf Astoria) sets a record for height is not exactly a magnet for extreme athletes. Compared to the skylines of Manhattan, Chicago, or even Frankfurt, Berlin's newly populated horizon still comes across as the silhouette of a provincial capital. In every other way as well, seen from above, Berlin lacks everything that makes a big city. It has no financial district like Manhattan or London, no venerable, centuries-old cathedral like Cologne or Paris, no notorious nightlife district like Hamburg. Even Berlin's "Eiffel Tower"--the aforementioned Radio Tower--is merely a modest copy of the Paris original. A friend of mine from Rome, the writer Edoardo Albinati, told me about his first time in Berlin. In the 1990s, he got off a train at the Zoo station in former West Berlin and took a look around. What he saw was the bleak station square with its currency-exchange offices and snack bars, the war-damaged steeple of the Gedächtniskirche (Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church), the Bilka department store with its decorative façade--once considered bold--of crisscrossing diagonal parallel lines, the Zoo Palast movie house emblazoned with a painted poster of an American action film. Yet, no matter where he turned, no soothing arch, dome, steeple, or façade presented itself for his spoiled Italian eyes to rest on. The way the square turned his gaze back on himself was the only thing that struck him as noteworthy. A few walks around the city tempered his opinion somewhat, but it never gave way to a sense of well-being. Berlin, he confessed to me with a polite smile, was by far the ugliest capital he had ever seen. Now, however, tens of thousands of Italians flock to Berlin every year, filling the streets of the northern metropolis with the melodious sounds of their language. On New Year's Eve, when temperatures are in the teens outside and the locals prefer to stay at home in front of the TV, hordes of Italian tourists swarm to the Brandenburg Gate to usher in the New Year with Berlin's famous fireworks--forbidden in Rome! And when natives of New York, Tel Aviv, or Rome ask me where I'm from and I allude to Berlin, their eyes instantly light up with curiosity, not to say enthusiasm. Without the slightest hesitation, they'll go on to tell me about their most recent or upcoming trip to Berlin--yet won't be able to tell me why they have fallen in love with this city of all places. They may bring up the ritual word "beautiful," but it doesn't really capture what it is that attracts them to the city. Mention the name of any other, far more beautiful European city and you won't get the same reaction. If beauty isn't the point, then what is? When I ask any twentysomething, irrespective of nationality, the answer is obvious. Berlin is the only major city without a mandatory closing time, where you can eat and/or get wasted for ten to twenty euros, and where the S-Bahn will get you to any club, even at four in the morning. Is that it? Not entirely. Part of Berlin's appeal also seems to be its history--both the good and the atrocious: Berlin, "the world metropolis of the 1920s," home to an international bohemian crowd; Berlin, the "capital of the Third Reich," where the most egregious crimes of the last century were hatched; Berlin, "the Wall city," divided for twenty-eight years before finally being reunified. Hardly any other city has experienced such extreme transformation in the last hundred years. It is a truly astounding oversight that city officials failed to ensure that a thirty-yard section of the border area--including the watchtowers, dog runs, and mine-strewn "death strip" secured on the East Berlin side by a rear wall known as the Hinterlandmauer --was preserved for posterity. After all, the average tourist doesn't come to hear the Berlin Philharmonic play or to go to the Pergamon Museum--he wants to see the Wall. The Wall is quite simply Berlin's most famous monument--the German counterpart to the Statue of Liberty! On the other hand, to be fair to the authorities, protecting even the tiniest section of the Wall in the wild days after November 9, 1989, would have been impossible. For weeks, tens of thousands of Berlin natives and visitors from around the world laid into the monstrosity with hammers and chisels. What would they have said if police had cordoned off a section of the Wall, under orders to protect it as a designated landmark? With what images and headlines would the international media have met such an attempt? Something along the lines of: EAST GERMAN BORDER TROOPS GIVE UP--WALL NOW GUARDED BY WEST BERLIN POLICE! By now, Berlin's tourism managers have realized that monuments commemorating crimes are not the least of the city's attractions. Year after year, the Holocaust Memorial registers well over a million visitors; in 2011, 650,000 people gaped at the newly completed Berlin Wall Memorial on Bernauer Straße; that same year, 340,000 tourists chose to visit the Berlin-Hohenschönhausen Memorial (the special prison complex of the East German secret service), where they listened to former inmates describe what they had been forced to endure in Stasi prison cells and interrogations. Today, half of Berlin's tourists come from abroad, and their numbers continue to grow every year. Forecasts already predict that the city, which currently counts 25 million overnight visitors, could soon catch up with Paris (37 million overnight visitors), thus making it second only to London. Whether Berlin's tourism professionals like it or not, the dark episodes of the city's past are part of its appeal. We should consider ourselves lucky that the Führerbunker is no longer accessible, because if it were, rest assured it would have joined the ranks of Berlin's "tourist attractions"--certainly no later than after the release of Downfall, the film about Hitler's final days. Fortunately, the entrances to the 29,000-square-foot complex, which the Red Army tried in vain to demolish, were built over. Today, the site is identified by an inconspicuous information plaque, installed by the Berliner Unterwelten (Berlin Underworlds) association on June 8, 2006, the day before the start of the soccer World Cup. To this day, the destruction of the old cityscape in the wake of two dictatorships still marks the architecture of Berlin--despite and because of so many fresh starts. Yet this defect does nothing to detract from the curiosity of visitors from around the world. What attracts them to Berlin seems to be precisely what they feel is missing in more beautiful cities: the weirdness, perpetual incompleteness, and outlandishness of Berlin--and the liveliness inherent in these qualities. Berlin was "condemned forever to becoming and never to being," the writer Karl Scheffler wrote in his 1910 polemic Berlin, ein Stadtschicksal (Berlin: Fate of a City). Scheffler described Berlin as an urban landscape "defined by a fundamental lack of organically developed structure." While Scheffler may have identified Berlin's genetic code, he vastly underestimated its advantages. Imperfection, incompleteness--not to say ugliness--afford a sense of freedom that compact beauty never can. Young visitors to a beautiful, expensive, and perfectly restored city feel excluded. Looking around, it is clear to them: every space here is already occupied. Cinderella Berlin offers an inestimable advantage over these princess cities: it gives all newcomers the feeling that there is still room for them, that they can still make something of themselves here. It is this peculiarity that makes Berlin the capital of creative people from around the world today. Twenty years ago, right after the fall of the Wall, I wrote a small series of articles for the German weekly Der Spiegel about Berlin and its impending reconstruction. I wanted to find out what city planners and architects had in mind for "my city." One of my most important sources at the time was a leading expert on Berlin: the publisher and journalist Wolf Jobst Siedler. I remember a walk we took together along the Kurfürstendamm in former West Berlin. At Lehniner Platz we turned onto Cicerostraße, a quiet side street off the Kurfürstendamm. The housing complex there, with its wavelike curved façades, had been built by the great architect Erich Mendelsohn in the 1920s. "There's no doubt," Siedler remarked, "that this is one of the most beautiful housing complexes in Berlin. But take a closer look. The entire complex is dead, a paradise for retirees, no matter how many young people may live here. There are no stores, no bars, no place for life outside the apartments. Only the tennis courts inside the complex provide any room to breathe." As it happened, I knew exactly what Siedler was taking about. I had spent a good part of my Berlin life on those nine tennis courts, surrounded by tall poplar trees, just a five-minute walk from my apartment. In the extreme quiet of Mendelsohn's complex, the tennis players' serves rang out like shots fired in a civil war, provoking regular complaints from the residents. Not to mention the stridently performed arguments between players over whether a ball was out or had just managed to touch the line. "In Berlin, you'll find you often have to choose between the beauty of a place and its liveliness," remarked Siedler, whose books conjure Berlin's forgotten and mistreated treasures with virtually unparalleled eloquence. It's probably because of Berlin that this statement has stayed with me more than any other I heard during the course of my research. For beauty and liveliness rarely go hand in hand in this city. But enough with the speculation and reminiscing. Instead, let me tell a story I just heard. My son and two of his friends recently moved into a cheap apartment on the top floor of a building in the Berlin-Neukölln district. Until recently, Neukölln, with the highest unemployment rate in Berlin (17 percent) and its predominantly Muslim population, was considered a doomed neighborhood. But my son and his friends put their money on Neukölln--because, in the meantime, young people from neighboring districts, who had inadvertently found themselves at the center of the city after the fall of the Wall and could no longer afford the rents, had moved there and opened Internet start-ups, fledgling galleries, even a few gourmet restaurants. The uncle of one of my son's friends gave them a three-seater leather sofa for their new apartment. They were dead set on transporting the massive thing home that same day. But night had already fallen, and the moving-van rental places were all closed. So the three young men heaved the sofa out of the uncle's apartment and onto the street, carrying it three blocks on their heads to the nearest S-Bahn station. On the way, they paused by a fountain on a square, plopped down onto the sofa, returned the greetings of passersby, and indulged in a few swigs of schnapps from the bottle they'd brought along. Nobody stopped them when they carried the sofa up the stairs to the tracks of the turnstile-free S-Bahn station. When the train arrived and the automatic doors opened, they shoved the couch into the car. Miraculously, it fit perfectly. The three young men sat down in their comfortable seats to enjoy the ride. Several passengers laughed, others offered to trade places with them, finally the entire car broke into applause: "Das ist Berlin!" --"That's Berlin!"--one of them shouted and everyone followed suit. "Das ist Berlin!" resounded throughout the car. The hardest part of the operation came after the S-Bahn ride: the three friends had to carry the couch several blocks and up five flights of stairs to their apartment. They succeeded because they had to succeed. They almost broke down trying to navigate the mammoth sofa past the narrow landings, but they never once doubted that their endeavor would end in triumph. When they finally made it to the top, they set the behemoth down in their apartment, helped themselves to their well-stocked liquor cabinet, and toasted first to themselves, then to Berlin, before falling asleep on the couch. Copyright © 2014 by Peter Schneider Excerpted from Untitled on Berlin by Peter Schneider All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.