Geert Mak
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Books
The Bridge
When the old wooden bridge breaks, a young boy is delighted to be able to watch, from his front yard, the many different machines at work building the new bridge across the brook.
Ooggetuigen van de vaderlandse geschiedenis in meer dan honderd reportages
Verslagen van zeer diverse gebeurtenissen en situaties uit de geschiedenis van Nederland van ca. 325 v. Chr. tot en met 31 juli 2004.
Gedoemd tot kwetsbaarheid
'Hoe kunnen we deze geschiedenis ooit aan onze kleinkinderen vertellen, het verhaal over die laatste maanden van 2004? Wat zullen we ons nog herinneren? Het doorstoken lichaam in de Linnaeusstraat? De kelders die opengingen? De almaar bewegende lippen van politici en intellectuelen? De stilte in de stad? De toon, de nieuwe toon die opeens was gezet? Waar moet ik beginnen?' Geert Mak
Kleine geschiedenis van Amsterdam
"In this examination of Amsterdam's soul - part history, part travel guide - the Dutch writer Geert Mak imaginatively depicts the lives of early Amsterdammers and traces the city's progress from a small town of merchants, sailors, farmers, and fishermen to a thriving metropolis. Mak's Amsterdam is a city of dreams and nightmares, of grand civic architecture and magnificent monuments, but also of civil wars, uprisings, and bloody religious purges. In his journey through the city and through time, Mak displays an eye for the bizarre and the unexpected: a Rembrandt sketch of a young girl executed for manslaughter; the shoe of a medieval lady unearthed during a remodeling project; a graffito foretelling the city's doom on the wall of a mansion, daubed by a deranged burgomaster with his own blood.". "Amsterdam remains a magnet for travelers from around the world, and this charmingly detailed account of its origins and its history through the present day is designed to help the reader step into daily life in a truly modern city."--BOOK JACKET.
De eeuw van mijn vader
Biography of the author's father, Catrinus Mak, partly used as a reason to give descriptions of the history of the Netherlands and the reformed church in the Netherlands, of which Catrinus was a preacher.
In Europa
Geert Mak spent the year of 1999 criss-crossing the continent, tracing the history of Europe from Verdun to Berlin, Saint Petersburg to Auschwitz, Kiev to Srebrenica. He set off in search of evidence and witnesses, looking to define the condition of Europe at the verge of a new millennium. The result is mesmerizing: Mak's rare double talent as a sharp-eyed journalist and a hugely imaginative historian makes In Europe a dazzling account of that journey, full of diaries, newspaper reports and memoirs, and the voices of prominent figures and unknown players; from the grandson of Kaiser Wilhelm II to Adrinana Warno in Poland, with her job at the gates of the camp at Birkenau. But Mak is above all an observer. He describes what he sees at places that have become Europe's wellsprings of memory, where history is written into the landscape. At Ypres, he hears the blast of munitions from the Great War that are still detonated there twice a day. In Warsaw, he finds the point where the tram rails that led to the Jewish ghetto come to a dead end in a city park. And in an abandoned nursery school near Chernobyl, where tiny pairs of shoes still stand in neat rows, he is transported back to the moment time stood still in the dying days of the Soviet Union. Mak combines the larger story of twentieth-century Europe with details that give it a face, a taste and a smell. His unique approach makes the reader an eyewitness to a half-forgotten past, full of unknown peculiarities, sudden insights and touching encounters. In Europe is a masterpiece; it reads like the epic novel of Europe's most extraordinary century.From the Hardcover edition.
