"A raging cataract of a novel, one that threatens to engulf the reader in a tumult of sensation. It has long been considered the behemoth of German literary modernism, the counterpart to
Ulysses." –Alex Ross,
The New Yorker
"Because of its use of collage, stream of consciousness, and colloquial speech,
Berlin Alexanderplatz has frequently been compared to Joyce's
Ulysses and John Dos Passos's
Manhattan Transfer...Beneath the book's innovative style, the reader can hear the gears of ancient narrative elements grinding: evocations of folk songs, myths and Old Testament stories, and themes of tragedy and fate." –Amanda DeMarco,
The Wall Street Journal "It was long branded untranslatable...Yet a fluent, pacy new translation by Michael Hofmann gainsays that assumption, opening up the book for English-speakers....Something of the psychology of Weimar, the desire to touch the electric fence just to see what happens, lives on in modern societies and makes them, in their own ways, vulnerable to extremism and demagoguery...One lesson of
Berlin Alexanderplatz is that darkness can take many forms." –
The Economist "[A] major writer who grappled with the roots of darkness in our time...." –Ernst Pawel,
The New York Times
"In this new translation, the dissonant voices ring out boldly; we can tell when someone is being mimicked and wickedly sent up, enjoy the black Berlin humor...Döblin is never sentimental, or hysterical. He just gets us to listen to the drumbeat of violence throbbing in this city of the mind.
Berlin Alexanderplatz is one of the great anti-war novels of our time." –Joachim Redner,
Australian Book Review "His was an extraordinary mind." –Philip Ardagh,
The Guardian "Without the futurist elements of Döblin's work from
Wang Lun to
Berlin Alexanderplatz, my prose is inconceivable.... He'll discomfort you, give you bad dreams. If you're satisfied with yourself, beware of Döblin." –Günter Grass
"I learned more about the essence of the epic from Döblin than from anyone else. His epic writing and even his theory about the epic strongly influenced my own dramatic art." –Bertolt Brecht
"As we look back over the rich literary output of this great writer, as we look back over the long and fruitful life of this fighter and this friend of man, this perennial spring of spiritual life, we venture to ask: When will the gentlemen [
sic] of the Nobel Prize jury discover him?" –Ludwig Marcuse,
Books Abroad