"Entertaining... A vivid collage of vignettes gleaned from diaries, police reports, snippets from newspapers, and so on. It dances from comedy to tragedy, from the ironic to the sinister, to give a picture of a darkening Germany... Hilmes has an eye for incidental detail." Robbie Millen, The Times
"A German historian charts the Berlin Olympics day by day through a series of memorable vignettes of life under Nazism. Hilmes. deceptively jaunty, even comic tone echoes that of the Games themselves" Simon Kuper, Financial Times, **Books of the Year**
"Eighty years after the events it depicts, Berlin 1936 is a small masterpiece . you actually feel like you were there. The book was originally in German, but Jefferson Chase.s translation is so perfectly judged, you.d never even notice" Marcus Berkmann, Daily Mail, **Books of the Year**
"Engrossing" Matt Chilton, **Books of the Year**, Daily Telegraph
"This book reads like a tourist guide to a city on the eve of destruction" Gerard DeGroot, The Times, **Books of the Year**