Interesting Times: A Twentieth-century Life
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Average customer review:Product Description
Born in 1917, the year of the Russian Revolution, the 85 years of Eric Hobsbawm's life are backdropped by an endless litany of wars, revolutions and counter-revolutions. He has led a remarkably fulfilling and long life; historian and intellectual, fluent in five languages, a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain, until it dissolved itself, and writer of countless volumes of history. He has personally witnessed some of the critical events of our century, from Hitler's rise to power in Berlin to the fall of the Berlin wall. Hobsbawm has kept his eyes and ears open for 85 years, and has been constantly committed to understanding the "interesting times" (as the Chinese curse puts it) through which he has lived. His autobiography is one passionate cosmopolitan Jew's account of his travels through that past which is another country, where they do things differently, and how it became the world we now live in.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #162708 in Books
- Published on: 2003-10-02
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 464 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'Inquest is the best succinct description of INTERESTING TIMES, a ruthlessly honest self-investigative book' ECONOMIST 'It is a life buried under the debris of world history which Hobsbawm excavates and recreates. He writes with a simple, clear style, free of flowery language, yet peppered with literary references . INTERESTING TIMES presents enough evidence to maintain Hobsbawm's status as an acclaimed historian' SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY
Daily Telegraph, September 21, 2002
This is an uncommonly interesting and agreeable autobiography, packed with detail and often wise reflection.
Financial Times, 21 September, 2002
in these marvellous encapsulations of our times he shows his gift as an historian and skills as a writer
Customer Reviews
Excellent
This is an excellent book and works on so many different levels. You read it as one man trying to reconcile his marxist beliefs with the horrors of stalins' russia and then the eventual collapse of communism. You can also read it as the life of an academic and his Universities. You can see it as the history of history itself in the twentieth century, even as the history of the author's history of the world. The point is, Hobsbawms life has been "interesting" and works its way around a number of important themes.
This is a dense, literate book and the style takes a bit of getting used to, but then becomes a wonderful easy read, full of fascinating incidental musings (especially on New York and Jazz) and intriguing characters. Moroever it is an intellectual's autobiography & it is especially interesting to read about the development of ideas and their impact. I'm docking one point because not enough of Hobsbawm the man is seen, but even so, I feel privileged to have had this insight into a very interesting life in very very interesting times. Highly recommended.
An Interesting Life
Hobsbawm's book is called Interesting Times rather than An Interesting Life, but that is just Hobsbawm being modest. After a lifetime of analyzing history from the perspective of a leftist, but generally even-handed, professor, he takes an opportunity to get a few things off his chest.
He tackles the question of why he stayed a communist for so long, even after the Stalin years forced so many believers to reevaluate their views. He discusses America frankly, past (loves New York, hates the suburbs near Stanford University) and present (the reaction to Sept. 11). He reminisces about wars, academia, and jazz.
About the only question he doesn't address is when and why he changed the spelling of his last name. Unimportant perhaps, but curious. A readable, entertaining, and thoughtful memoir of an interesting man in a troubled century.
Interesting and - at least personally - lucky times
Who ever is interested in newer history, in extensive portraits of European (and partly non-European) countries or single landscapes and towns (like Cambrigde) and in cultures in their different expressions can raise a treasure here.
Already the chapters about the France and Italy of the decades between 1930 and 1995 (the author actually experienced this period of time personally) are wonderful, small books for itself. Written excellently this book can easily be read and is never superficial. A fine consumption perhaps like the red wine to a good meal. Unfortunately, it is also the slightly melancholy look back to the times that more and more seem to have been the golden age of the last centuries. In terms of Hobsbawm who simplifies consciously it were the times when the rich ones had to fear the poor ones. Hobsbawm considers his own life as an unusual and not at all foreseeable case of luck. It is generous that he invides us to take part in his review of interesting and personally lucky times.
It is one of the best books which I know. I would like to always have a stack to the hand - for giving away a copy to friends.




