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Defying Hitler

A Memoir

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When the famous German author Sebastian Haffner died at age ninety-one in 1999, a manuscript was discovered among his unpublished papers that offers a compelling eyewitness account of the rise of Hitler and Nazism. He describes the country's inflation and the political climate that contributed to Hitler's rise to power and also examines the pervasive influence of such groups as the Free Corps and the Hitler Youth movement that swept the nation. He elucidates how the average educated German grappled with a rapidly changing society, while chronicling day-to-day changes in attitudes, beliefs, politics, and prejudices. A major best-seller in Germany, Defying Hitler is an illuminating portrait of a time, a place, and a peo

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Living with teeth clenched is how the author describes his existence in Germany during the rise of Nazism. As a non-Jewish citizen and a lawyer, his observations of the changes that took place in German society between his youth and the Third Reich's rise to power allow listeners to realize--by means of an intelligent mind--how it transpired. An aristocratic-sounding British reader for a German author begs our credulity. Furthermore, Robert Whitfield's dull monotone and long pauses at the end of each sentence don't add the needed color. Expect not to be entertained or spellbound but rather to gain a perspective unavailable from other WWII memoirs. J.A.H. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 22, 2002
      A sample historical headline: "1890: Wilhelm II dismisses Bismarck." No one's life was disrupted, writes Haffner. "No family was torn apart, no friendship broken up, no one fled their country." Compare that with "1933: Hindenburg sends for Hitler." In this case, "n earthquake shatters 66 million lives." Thus begins a vivid examination of just how Hitler's ascension affected an ordinary German, a young lawyer with no strong political views, whose career and life were disrupted by the Nazis. Written in 1939, this memoir was not published until 2000, when Pretzel, Haffner's son, brought it out in Germany, where it was a bestseller. Haffner alternates political analysis with accounts of how the rise of the Nazis in the 1920s and early '30s affected his attempts to build a career, keep friendships alive and kindle romantic liaisons. His analysis of the failure of post-WWI German society to create stability is familiar, but Haffner writes with a close familiarity that makes the old new again. And his description of the way the Nazis invaded people's daily lives shines. It becomes clear how many "good Germans" struggled against impossible odds to keep their personal lives politics-free. Unfortunately, Haffner's manuscript ends with 1933 (Pretzel covers the rest of Haffner's life, beginning with immigration to England, in a brief afterword). This intimate self-portrait stands with Victor Klemperer's two-part memoir, I Will Bear Witness, as evidence that the personal can offer insight into the political tragedy of Nazism.

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  • English

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