As the Berlin Wall crumbles, two lives are unexpectedly connected by history's fault lines.
Veteran foreign correspondent Natalie Chester races into West Berlin on the night the Wall opens, expecting the story of a lifetime--crowds surging toward freedom, a superpower standoff dissolving in real time, a Cold War ending in celebration not bloodshed. Instead, she finds her judgment is questioned. Sidelined by her editor, she's paired with David Schiller, a gifted but guarded American photographer who clearly wants nothing to do with her.
Sent back and forth across the shattered border to chronicle the human cost of division, Natalie and David follow East Germans tasting capitalism for the first time, secret police scrambling to cover their tracks, and reformers risking everything to drag a failed state into an uncertain future. But when a faded place name in an East German guidebook points to the obscure village where David's father was born--and disappeared--a routine assignment turns into a personal reckoning neither of them planned.
From across the Eastern Bloc to a ghostly East German hamlet that has never recovered from the war, Dispatches from Berlin weaves political intrigue with intimate drama as two reporters navigate censorship, betrayal, and grief while trying to get the story right. In this second installment of the Iron Curtain Chronicles, Carol J. Williams offers readers a front-row seat to the end of the Cold War--and asks what it costs to tell the truth when the world finally starts to change.