Sunday, April 26, 2009

BIRDSEED IN BERLIN


When I am sent or beg a book via Karen of Euro Crime I usually try to say nothing about the book until the review appears on Euro Crime. 

But on this occasion I am reading a book which is such a masterpiece that I can't resist quoting one passage which so brilliantly expresses the banality of everyday life during the war, and is in stark contrast to the atmosphere of fear that pervades the rest of the narrative.  

Then he was standing in front of the shop and peering in through the shiny silver bars of the birdcages-yes there was Hetty. She was waiting on customers; four or five people were in the shop. He joined them and watched with pride and trembling heart how skilfully she served them, how polite she was with them. 

"We no longer carry Indian millet, madam. India is part of the British Empire. But I have Bulgarian millet which is much better."  

1 Comments:

Blogger Dorte H said...

Oh, whoever would want British Empire millet when one could get it from Bulgaria! ;)

A fine quote - as ever.

1:24 PM  

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