A punishingly evocative odyssey of personal, political and aesthetic transformation through techno - this book made me ache all over for Berlin. * Lias Saoudi, Fat White Family/Decius * Liam Cagney doesnt just write from the middle of the dance floor. Hes there in the queue, in the club toilets and in dark corners. Zooming between histories of techno, Berlin clubs and his childhood in rural Donegal, this no-holds-barred exploration of dance-floor life describes a site of transformation and repair. * Emma Warren, author of Dance Your Way Home: A Journey Through the Dancefloor * Liam Cagney's Berghain Nights is far beyond a hedonism manual or coolhunter's itinerary. In fact, it's a deeply felt protest in favour of the utopian impulses endangered by overexposure. His sense of club culture as a precious ecosystem as worthy of preservation as his beloved Grünewald and Donegal bogland, whose surreal, meditative elsewheres he spreads open, until they open across the floors of some of Berlin's most radical and radicalising venues. Cagney is a self-effacing, gentle, and meditative narrator, as comfortably uncomfortable in Kilclooney as he is surrounded by ketamine. He reminds us that club culture belongs to those nowhere people from black and white towns who just want to feel vivid for a moment. His precise, cerebral, and visceral language builds via a scrupulous but never studied attentiveness to a kind of prose Ganzfeld effect. Cagney is all about sensation, not sensationalism. As such, his sentences catch the ecstatic, teeming nothingness on the far side of the self and the far side of the DJ booth. Bracing, transporting, and phenomenally well-sourced, this combination of memoir, music journalism, and social history is a future classic of urban pastoral. * Tim MacGabhann, author of The Black Pool * Let Liam Cagney take you on an intense and revelatory journey from Donegal to Berghain. It's a trip that takes in the history of techno, the thrill of nightlife and the freedom of the self. Candid and captivating, Berghain Nights is a deeply exciting book which made me think in new ways about clubbing as an experience. * Wendy Erskine, author of The Benefactors * An immersive, fascinating whirl through a famous club, but also culture, psychogeography and the things that bind us together. Utterly gripping, often moving and a nostalgic re:up for anyone who has given up on clubbing or music. * Sinéad Gleeson, author of Hagstone * Fascinated by Berghains strange techno and stranger goings-on, Cagney explores Berlin club culture in all its colour and intensity. A story of the most notorious club in the world that feeds millions into Berlins economy, and feeling at home in the most alien of environments. * The Bookseller: LGBTQ+ Spotlight * An engrossing, revealing journey through Berlin and techno history * Misha Honcharenko, author of Skin of Nocturnal Apple *