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review 2017-01-30 22:02
Look Who's Back
Look Who's Back - Timur Vermes

Provocative satire, that is definitely not "pro-Hitler", but also raises quite a few interesting points when our modern societies are concerned. Mainly, the power of the media; the way one can use it to ends that aren't the ones the audience thinks; and how it can be easy enough for a person with heinous ideas to abuse people who are mostly nice into paving the way for a monster. And let's be honest, considering some current events, this satiric novel is also very, very frightening when you think about it.

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review 2016-07-01 15:57
Look Who's Back - Timur Vermes

This book has the interesting premise that Hitler, somehow finding himself alive in present-day (2011) Germany, tries to regain popularity and power with the use of modern media. However, I'm not entirely sure what the author is trying to convey.

If it is trying to portray how a person from the 1940s would cope with modern technology, I guess it is generally successful although some parts appear to be aiming for slapstick humour, and I find them to be quite jarring.

But if it is a satirical piece on politicians and how politics are conducted through TV talk shows and Youtube videos, then it doesn't go far enough. Still, this may be due to the fact that the author is holding back since Hitler is still a sensitive topic in Germany. The book is originally written in German and one scathing review online criticised the book for making light of Hitler and his policies.

However, in light Donald Trump (and Brexit, to a lesser extent), I do feel that this book can be seen as a warning against him. Appealing to xenophobic sentiments? Check. Criticising immigration and employment policies without considering their ramifications? Check. Sound bites which are appealing but have no substance? Check, check, check.

Still, this book was written in 2011, before Donald Trump, and this may be why it didn't go far enough, assuming that it is a satirical piece on politics. Overall, an average book although it may rise in significance after the US Presidential elections.

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review SPOILER ALERT! 2016-05-18 17:38
Hitler Walks Into a Bar...
Look Who's Back - Timur Vermes

Just kidding. [spoiler] But he does wake up in an empty lot..in 2011 Berlin [/spoiler]. But Timur Vermes Look Who's Back reads like the world's longest, most hilarious scenario joke you've ever run across. Except that Timur Vermes isn't joking...[spoiler] and neither is his Hitler[/spoiler].

 

Time travel doesn't phase Hitler the way it phases most people. Sure, it takes him a little bit to figure out where/when he is and what's going on, but then he's--as the title announces--back [spoiler] (and taking German media by storm in a misunderstood attempt to resurrect the Nazi movement) [/spoiler]. And Timur Vermes hasn't placed the Fuhrer [spoiler] and his unwavering faith in his movement [/spoiler] in the present day for nothing.

 

Look Who's Back will make you laugh out loud as you follow Hitler's journey through modern-day Germanic culture [spoiler] (and try to make people understand that he's actually Adolf Hitler: easier said than done) [/spoiler]. But it will also leave you just a little worried...[spoiler] after all, at the end of the day Hitler does rather a spectacular job of convincing the German media to help him out without their even realizing the scope of what they're doing [/spoiler].

 

Look Who's Back is a 5 star read: hilarious, satirical, light-hearted, with a depth of cultural analysis. Worth a read, and worth taking the time to understand what Vermes is saying.

[spoiler] Because Hitler in the 21st century isn't actually a punch line: it's serious.[/spoiler]

 

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review 2015-10-07 23:04
Look Who's Back by Timur Vermes
Look Who's Back - Timur Vermes
bookshelves: radio-4, play-dramatisation, germany, alternative-history, satire, published-2012, translation, amusing, berlin, autumn-2015
Read from October 20, 2013 to October 05, 2015



http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06f54rq

Description: The next stop on Radio 4's literary journey across Europe is Timur Vermes' transgressive novel which topped the bestseller list in its native Germany.

Look Who's Back shocked and then thrilled over 1.5 million German readers with its bold approach to the most taboo of subjects - Adolf Hitler. David Threlfall stars as the infamous Nazi leader in this provocative satire.






Part 1: When Adolf Hitler wakes up in modern day Germany he is not pleased. The war is lost. The Nazi party is defunct. And his beloved Fatherland is being run by a woman. He decides to re-take control. Only this time, mistaken for a comedy impersonator, his road to power is paved with TV stardom and internet fame.

Part 2: Having woken up in modern day Berlin Adolf Hitler decides he needs to re-take control of his beloved Fatherland. But when he is mistaken for a comedy impersonator by TV Executives, rather than running the country, he finds himself the star of a satirical show. As his rants against foreigners and current politics increase in popularity, so does his power over the German people.





Originally I had dismissed this as a viable encounter, then BBC decided to air it and I jumped in for a looksee. Have little idea why this is considered controversial, 'Look Who's Back' is sub-par satire, a poor cousin to, say, the Downfall parodies, The Great Dictator, Springtime, etc. Of course, there is the aspect where Berliners, then entire Germany become mesmerised by him all over again...

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review 2015-07-04 09:58
Controversial
Look Who's Back - Timur Vermes


I have read this book with mixed feelings.
It is bizarre, maybe. But there were moments that this book made me laugh loud.
The book managed to shine a light on the more ridiculous aspects of modern life and in particular the media and the deification of celebrity.
Despite the strange subject matter, Timur manages to make Hitler seem almost likeable.
Excellent satire and very thought provoking.

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