Goodbye to Berlin
Short Story
Goodbye
to Berlin
Christopher
Isherwood
Goodbye
to Berlin contains six connected short stories- book is referred as novel in
many reviews- written by Christopher Isherwood centered on Berlin of the early
1930s just before the takeover of Germany by Hitler. Isherwood lived in Berlin
then and gave private tuitions in English for a living. These six pieces do not
form a continuous narrative but have a common thread connecting all. The common thread is the setting of time and
place and the narrator, the author himself. In the book Christopher Isherwood
appears as himself. He is not only the narrator but an important character in
most of the stories. Book is semiautobiographical. Most reviews of the book
have praised it for its beautiful evocation Berlin’s past in those prewar years
when disaster was just around the corner but life in the bars, homes and
offices continued albeit with the premonition of the danger looming large. Except
for the last piece ‘The Berlin Diary (Winter 1932-3)’ I could not discern any deliberate
intention of the author to write about the atmosphere of Berlin during those portentous
days. He has mostly steered clear of political milieu of that period in all
stories accept the last and this particular piece reads more like an essay than
a story. Sometimes, I doubt whether the blurb writers really read the book they
are writing about which sadly induces or prevents a reader from buying the
particular book. In this book Isherwood writes about some interesting people he
met in Berlin during that time (for the book is so well written that I cannot
bring myself to believe that these characters are the product of the author’s
imagination). His portrayal of these people is extremely skillful. Result is an
endlessly delightful book of which you can never have enough. His language is bewitchingly
simple and concise. His suave but unpretentious wit is evident throughout the
book. Though the narration is mostly in a humorous vein there is an
undercurrent of melancholy and pathos. In these pages you meet the ever
vivacious Frau Shroider, keeper of the
guest house where Isherwood stayed off and on, snooping around, good naturedly,
in to the lives of her tenants; Sally Bowles an unconventional and fatuous English
Girl with an innocent and generous heart from a middle-class family who has come
to Berlin to enjoy life; the sophisticated and rich Jew family of Landauers;
the tragic-comic family of the poor Nowaks; and the weird and sad Englishman
Peter Wilkinson whom Isherwood befriends during his stay at a Baltic resort. One
cannot but marvel at Isherwood’s powers of perception in noticing absurdities of
human behavior in most humdrum settings Isherwood’s consummate skill as a
writer in creating such alluring narratives out of these observations. These
stories should be case study in character portrayal for any aspiring author. A
very satisfying read. Memories of the characters stay with you for long.
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