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The File

The File

Author(s): Timothy Garton Ash

Location(s): Eastern Europe, Germany

Genre(s): Autobiography/Memoirs

Era(s): Second half of the 20th Century

Location

Content

This classic of modern reportage by one of Britain’s most distinguished non-fiction writers describes what happened when he got access to the file on him kept during his years in East Germany by the Stasi, the infamous secret police. In 1978 a romantic young Englishman took up residence in Berlin to see what that divided city could teach him about tyranny and freedom. Fifteen years later Timothy Garton Ash – who was by then famous for his reportage of the downfall of communism in Central Europe – returned. This time he had come to look at a file that bore the code-name ‘Romeo’. The file had been compiled by the Stasi, the East German secret police, with the assistance of dozens of informers. And it contained a meticulous record of Garton Ash’s earlier life in Berlin. In this memoir, Garton Ash describes what it was like to rediscover his younger self through the eyes of the Stasi, and then to go on to confront those who actually informed against him to the secret police. Moving from document to remembrance, from the offices of British intelligence to the living rooms of retired Stasi officers, “The File” is a personal narrative as gripping, as disquieting, and as morally provocative as any fiction by George Orwell or Graham Greene. And it is all true.

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Book Reviews

Lead Review

A rivetting account in retropsect of the discoveries Garton Ash made about himself and about others around him when he was in the East – TF –

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