Cafe Berlin Author:Harold Nebenzal It is the late 1930s-the high-pitched tail end of the infamous years between the wars. Berlin is a night city, pulsing with the neon signs and imported jazz of ten thousand cabarets. Daniel Saporta a.k.a. Salazar-a Sephardic Jew passing as a Spaniard-is the celebrated owner of Klub Kaukasus, an oriental cabaret touted by the local scandal sheet ... more »as the definitive Café Berlin. Playing host to high-ranking Nazi officers unaware of his true identity, Daniel caters to appetites both pure and perverse, providing his clientele with first-rate food, drink, and women.
It is 1943. Daniel Saporta is in hiding. From his cramped, unheated attic cubicle, he writes his story about the years in Berlin leading up to his concealment. Utterly accurate in its depiction of historical and military events and astoundingly rich in detail, Café Berlin, sold in five countries, creates a vivid and compelling picture of a city and a time that fascinated and appalled the rest of the world half a century ago.« less