Walls

Walls

L.M. Elliott

Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

Drew is an army brat, a hotshot athlete poised to be his high school’s star pitcher, when he has to move for the sixth time in fifteen years—this time to West Berlin, where American soldiers like his dad hold an outpost of democracy against communist Russia in Hitler’s former capital. Meanwhile, in East Berlin, his cousin Matthias has grown up in the wreckage left by Allied bombing during World War II, on streets ruled by the Communist Party’s secret police. From the opposing sides of the Cold War, Drew and Matthias begin to overcome the many ideological walls between them to become wary friends. They argue over the space race, capitalism, socialism, and even the American civil rights movement, and bond over rock ’n’ roll—music outlawed in Matthias’s part of the city. If Matthias is caught by the Stasi’s neighborhood spies with the records or books Drew has given him, he will be sent to a work camp for “re-education.” At the same time, Drew’s friendship with the East Berlin Jugend—who ardently spout communist dogma—raises suspicions about his family’s loyalty to America. As the political situation around them gets all the more dire, Drew and Matthias’s loyalty—to their sector, their countries, their families, and each other—will be tested in ways that will change their lives forever. Set in the tumultuous year leading up to the surprise overnight raising of the Berlin Wall in August 1961, and punctuated with real-life photographs, headlines, and personalities of the time, Walls brings to vivid life the heroic and tragic choices of the Cold War.

Publication Year: 2021


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  • iamkallia
    Feb 06, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    I've wavered between two and three stars the whole time I was reading it, and while the last chapter nearly saved it, I just couldn't give it the full three stars, and had to settle for two.

    The story is... Fine. It's pretty blatant from the get go how it's going to end. There was just too many "and everyone started dancing" or "and everyone started singing" moments for me. Every time that happened, which seemed like every other chapter, it just really pulled me out of the story.

    The pictographs were really the best part - it was a very good framing device, and I give the author credit for that.

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