Shortly after the dramatic events of 1989, Eva Hoffman spent
several months travelling through her native Poland and four other
Eastern European countries, what was then Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
Romania and Bulgaria, all of which had just undergone an historic
transformation.
While making her way from the Baltic to the Black Sea, Eva
Hoffman ranged from capital cities to wayside villages and sleepy
provincial towns; she visited shipyards, museums, homes and the
coffee-houses of the intelligentsia, and she talked to a great
variety of people, many of whom were struggling with the transition
from an unwanted pass to an uncertain future.
Through these encounters, through anecdotes, revealing
observations and biographical portraits, Eva Hoffman evoked the
eclectic mosaic of the new Eastern Europe, while also
reconstructing the turbulent experiences of the post-war decades
and reflecting on the uses and misuses of historical memory.
"Exit into History" remains an arresting and intimate report
from a contemporary revolution, one that has changed Europe for
ever.
'It is the enormous merit of Hoffman's book that it is free from
ideological claptrap. It is beautifully written, full of word
pictures that stay in the mind. She understands the way human
beings have been moulded by politics, gender, race and generation.'
"Independent"
""
'It is a great achievement and a unique book . . . This is an
indispensable clue for anyone who is keen to understand how the new
Europe is emerging from the debris of the Cold War period.' Ryszard
Kapuscinski
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