Shock waves from the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989 continue to pulse through German society. As the difficult process of reunification continues, it is worth recalling the revolutionary moment when immense crowds took to the streets of Leipzig and Berlin under the banner We Are the People and brought down one of the worlds most oppressive dictatorships. Robert Darntons eyewitness account of those historic days is direct and vivid. His prose conveys the immediacy of the drama. He gives us a memorable cast of characters, from two experts on the repair of broken-down Trabis to the environmental councilor for the polluted city of Bitterfeld, and Isaak Behar, a Jew who managed to survive the Holocaust while hiding in wartime Berlin. With wit and insight Darnton takes us behind the scenes to meet ordinary people grappling with great change, humanizing history.Makes us appreciate something of what it felt like for Germans East and West as the world ended. Anthony Bailey,