The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany by William L. Shirer

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(Paperback - 1ST. TOUCH)

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  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: November 1990
  • ISBN-13: 9780671728687
  • Sales Rank: 8,035
  • 1264pp
  • Edition Description: 1ST. TOUCH
 
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Synopsis

Considered by many to be the definitive history of National Socialism in Germany, this book examines how Adolf Hitler nearly succeeded in conquering the world. Shirer reveals the chilling details of meticulously recorded warroom powwows, concentration camp procedures, the private diaries of officials, and even private conversations between Hitler and his henchmen that led to the birth—and destruction—of a nightmare empire. A vital and enduring classic, as fascinating and as chilling today as when it was first published four decades ago. "One of the most important works of history of our time.''—The New York Times.

Annotation

This worldwide best-seller has been acclaimed as the definitive book on Nazi Germany; it is a classic work.

H. R. Trevor-Roper

How can we even look objectively on the Third Reich? It was the greatest, most horrible phenomenon of the twentieth century...Now, as never before, the living witnesses can converge with the historical truth. All they need is a historian. In William L. Shirer they have found him. Books of the Century, The New York Times review, October, 1960

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Biography

William L. Shirer has had a distinguished career as foreign correspondent, news commentator, and historian of the contemporary world. He reported from Berlin for the Universal News Service and for CBS on the rise of the Nazis and he covered their all as a war correspondent. Out of these reports grew his best-sellers Berlin Diary and The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, which has sold more copies for the Book-of-the-Month Club than any other book in the club's history.
Shirer is the author of many other best-selling books, including The Collapse of the Third Republic and an autobiography, Twentieth Century Journey: A Memoir of a Life and the Times, composed of three volumes -- The Start: 1904-1930, The Nightmare Years: 1930-1940, and A Native's Return: 1945-1988. He is at work on a new book about the last two weeks of Tolstoy's life.

Customer Reviews

A great book to read, notably by scholars..., it deserves more than 5 starsby Beirut768

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November 12, 2008: The late William Shirer left us one of the very few sober accounts written about Hitler and Nazi Germany.
The credence of this book lays in the fact that the author lived in Germany, witnessed and felt the pulse of the WWII events.
We do not see many silly `labelling' of Adolph Hitler `the mad man', his `illegitimate father'. Or Hitler loitering the street of Vienna `roaming on his face', having failed his exams at National Art Academy, deciding to avenge from Austria `to vindicate his honour'.

In this book we can learn the early events that led to WWII.
We can see how Churchill's reticence to respond to many peace overtures Hitler offered in 1939 and after - when the British and French leaders were fighting much among themselves - hampered the quest for reconciliation.

Shirer spoke the language and mixed with the German people, he ate with them, rode their buses, listened to their radio, read their newspapers, and what is appreciable though is nowhere in the book one can see accusations that Hitler was a world threat - no wonder why the author was blacklisted in the early fifties for his daring and open-minded views.

Shirer couldn't have possibly seen how Paul Reynaud, the French Premier, listened to his mistress - Madame Helene de Portes - to sign the armistice with Germany at the time Churchill was equivocal with his promises to help France when Roosevelt was unprepared.
Shirer wrote on Page 740 "Hitler was determined above all not to allow the French Fleet to fall into the hands of the British"........."the armistice terms were designed to keep a French government functioning on French soil, and the French Fleet neutralized"... Whereas Churchill had aimed at getting the fleet scuttled because he was not sure the French were able to fight from North Africa, and sending the fleet to British waters would have been a liability on GB. Churchill would be held responsible for French towns destruction from the German air raids `as long as Britain held the French fleet'.

This is a great book to read, and a must read by scholars....

Should be mandatory in every highschoolby Anonymous

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September 29, 2006: The most terrifying and illuminating book I've ever read - don't let the length scare you away! I couldn't put it down and I'm now reading it for the second time. Listening to conservative talk radio after reading this book really gives me the creeps - I wish they'd read this before promoting 1. the end of judicial independence 2. a more pro-state press and 3. a more nationalist platform in acadamia!


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