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The identity of Hillers as the author was not revealed until , after her death. The work depicts the widespread rape of civilians by Soviet soldiers , including the rape of the author. It also looks at a woman's pragmatic approach to survival, which involved relying on Soviet officers for protection. The first English edition appeared in the United States, where it was very successful, and was followed rapidly by translations into Dutch, Italian, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Spanish, and Japanese.
When finally published in German in , [ 2 ] the book was either "ignored or reviled" in Germany. In , two years after Hillers' death, a new edition of the book was published in Germany, again anonymously. It met with wide critical acclaim and was on bestseller lists for more than 19 weeks. Jens Bisky, a German literary editor, identified the anonymous author that year as German journalist Marta Hillers , who had died in The book was published again in English in in editions in the United Kingdom and the United States.
The memoir describes a journalist's personal experiences during the occupation of Berlin by the Soviets at the end of World War II. She describes being gang raped by Russian soldiers and deciding to seek protection by forming a relationship with a Soviet officer; other women made similar decisions. The author described it as "sleeping for food. The book is known for its "unsentimental" tone in describing sexual assault [ 7 ] but, as a New York Times critic pointed out, "the rapes are by no means all of [the book].
We are also given the feeling inside a bomb shelter, the breakdown of city life and civil society, the often surreal behavior of the enemy, soldiers' arms lined with looted wristwatches, the forced labor clearing out the rubble piles that marks the beginning of the road back. The "chronicle" of the unnamed Narrator begins with the end of the war reaching Berlin. There is constant artillery and the Narrator lives in an attic apartment that belongs to a former colleague that let her stay since he is on leave.