Bowling for Communism approaches the history of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) in a way that few other scholarly works do. While Demshuk's analysis does much to bring into question the totalitarian model when applied to the GDR, it also effectively describes how poorly run East Germany actually was. (Choice) Assembled from an impressive wealth of archival and oral sources, Bowling for Communism demonstrates that there remain many more interpretive and conceptual angles from which to tackle some of the big questions about state and society relationships in the late GDR. [T]his is a rich and innovative study that will provide a number of helpful points of departure for future studies of the urban history of Late Socialism. (German History) Thanks to its nuanced analysis, multi-dimensional outlook and highly original analystical framework developed throughout the monograph, Bowling for Communism will be of interest not only to specialists in German history but to a wide array of researchers who wish to enrich their understanding of social and political change in socialist societies. (EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY & ECONOMICS) Overall, this is a fascinating multifaceted book which explores an often overlooked aspect of urban informality in late Communism. (SLAVONIC AND EAST EUROPEAN REVIEW) Demshuk's argument is a powerful reminder that politics is only a small part of the wider context that shapes how people live. (Survival: Global politics and strategy) Andrew Demshuk offer[s] stimulating analyses based on empirically rich case studies that will be of interest to scholars of East-West German histories and the transformation of rural and urban spaces alike.
(German Historical Institute London Bulletin).