During World War Two, 131 German cities and towns were targeted by
Allied bombs, a good number almost entirely flattened. Six hundred
thousand German civilians died--a figure twice that of all American war
casualties. Seven and a half million Germans were left homeless. Given
the astonishing scope of the devastation, W. G. Sebald asks, why does
the subject occupy so little space in Germany's cultural memory? On
the Natural History of Destruction probes deeply into this ominous
silence.