Everything looks good in this city. With its stylish fashion and puristic office complexes, Copenhagen is definitely as close as a city can get to perfection … but first impressions can be deceptive; if you look closer, you’ll see this is a city of contradictions. They appear in the shape of Copenhagen’s showcase alternative commune Christiania, Denmark’s social and asylum policies, and the country’s habit of cherry-picking where the EU is concerned.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Europeans at heart is a vivid and colourful series of travel and culture books that brings you closer to Europe’s countries and its people. This e Book is an extended and updated travel account taken from ‘Europeans at heart: a journey of discovery through 28 EU capitals’.
CONTENT
+ The thrill of the unknown
+ Denmark (DK) at a glance
+ Both instead of either/or
+ Christa Klickermann, talking with Claus Christensen
+ Additional Links
+ He who knows nothing, must believe it all: Europe, the key facts
+ In touch with Europe – an authentic journey of discovery
Praise for Europeans at heart:
Interview with Deutsche Welle TV:
“After reading this book, you will find it impossible not to fall in love with Europe.”
Schekker, the German Government’s online portal for young people:
“This collection of accounts delivers a brief but brilliant glimpse into life in Europe’s incredibly diverse countries, as well as lots of useful information and fabulous pictures that will fill you to the brim with wanderlust. Having taken a literary voyage through the continent via the pages of this book, I can definitely say that I am European at heart. What about you?”
Polen-pl.eu, online Polish culture portal:
“‘The one language that we all understand, and which closely connects all of us Europeans, is the language of the heart: the desire to understand, to empathise, to laugh and find out more about one another.’ And that, according to Christa Klickermann, is the key to living together in harmony. With her book, the author hopes to inspire us and imbue us with a sense of confidence about Europe’s future, and she more than succeeds in doing both. Her approach is so effective in fact that as a reader you feel tempted to take leave and embark on your own European journey of exploration.”