Fresh and unique take of the Berlin Airlift - a beautifully written and textured portrait of a city under siege. This fascinating new book tells the forgotten story of a group of airmen who had spent WW2 dropping bombs on Berlin, who risked their lives in 1948-9 instead dropping chocolate bars from the sky, and how a group of German citizens looked to the skies not with dread and hatred but with hope and admiration. Through this deeply human lens, Dr Pearson gives crucial historical insight into how lasting new battlelines were formed; the Berlin Airlift wrote the playbook of the Cold War and it still influences Western thinking and diplomacy with Russia to this day. This is not a standard military history; The Airlift uses extensive archives and interviews to interweave everyday characters' tales into an extraordinary story. They include an American pilot crashing in Soviet territory, a Jewish photographer struggling to reconcile with the Germans, the 17,000 women who built Tegel Airport, Cambridge University actors performing in the ruins for British intelligence, Hollywood star Montgomery Clift filming at Tempelhof airport, and a Berlin girl trying to outrun the boys reaching for chocolate. By uncovering untapped sources in both German and Anglo-American archives, Dr Pearson gives a unique and textured portrait of a city during the Cold War's first major conflict through the lives of real individuals. AUTHOR: Dr Joseph Pearson was born in Canada, studied at Middlebury College in Vermont and has a doctorate in Modern History from the University of Cambridge. He taught at Columbia University and currently lectures at the Barenboim-Said Academie and New York University in Berlin. He is the author of My Grandfather's Knife (The History Press) and Berlin (Reaktion Books), a portrait of the city in which he now lives and works. 30 b/w illustrations