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Hitler: 1936-1945 Nemesis Paperback – September 17, 2001
The climax and conclusion of one of the best-selling biographies of our time.
The New Yorker declared the first volume of Ian Kershaw's two-volume masterpiece "as close to definitive as anything we are likely to see," and that promise is fulfilled in this stunning second volume. As Nemesis opens, Adolf Hitler has achieved absolute power within Germany and triumphed in his first challenge to the European powers. Idolized by large segments of the population and firmly supported by the Nazi regime, Hitler is poised to subjugate Europe. Nine years later, his vaunted war machine destroyed, Allied forces sweeping across Germany, Hitler will end his life with a pistol shot to his head. "[M]ore probing, more judicious, more authoritative in its rich detail...more commanding in its mastery of the horrific narrative."―Milton J. Rosenberg, Chicago Tribune 48 pages of black and white illustrations- Print length1168 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
- Publication dateSeptember 17, 2001
- Dimensions6.1 x 1.4 x 9.1 inches
- ISBN-109780393322521
- ISBN-13978-0393322521
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Product details
- ASIN : 0393322521
- Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company; First Edition (September 17, 2001)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 1168 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780393322521
- ISBN-13 : 978-0393322521
- Item Weight : 2.29 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.1 x 1.4 x 9.1 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #511,141 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #174 in Historical Germany Biographies
- #1,010 in German History (Books)
- #4,295 in World War II History (Books)
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Customers find the book marvelously written, well-thought-out, and researched. They also describe the biography as excellent, fascinating, and enlightening.
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Customers find the book marvelously written, well-thought-out, and informative. They also say it goes into amazing detail and completes the story started in the first book.
"This book, along with volume 1, is amazing piece of work--exhaustive and at times exhausting, but for the most part eminently readable...." Read more
"...it provides strategic analysis* it provides vivid detail - a local enthusiast in Lithuania clubbed to death 50 Jews in 45 minutes then..." Read more
"...Don't get me wrong--the book is a real achievement and "as I noted" (to use another of Kershaw's pet phrases without the royal 'we'), I..." Read more
"...thesis, still less a revisionist stance, but provides a meticulously researched account of Hitler's successes followed by his slide into total defeat..." Read more
Customers find the biography excellent, fascinating, and enlightening. They say it provides perspective regarding the significance of events and a wealth of information in chronological order.
"...The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich--that is, there is a wealth of detail about political, social, and military history...." Read more
"...it provides perspective regarding the significance of events - Dunkirk was strategically much more important than I otherwise knew - the Battle of..." Read more
"...and its obvious "scholarliness." And it was certainly a good biography, which I would recommend...." Read more
"An incredibly gripping and detailed biography of Hitler’s day-to-day decisions and the henchmen who enabled his rise to power and their own..." Read more
Customers find the bibliography extensive and excellent. They also say the index to the book makes specific inquiries much easier. Readers also mention the book is comprehensive and lucid.
"...The index to the book is excellent and makes specific inquiries that much easier to track down...." Read more
"...Kershaw provides a lucid, comprehensive, and convincing account of Hitler's origins, early unrequited search for respectability, commitment..." Read more
"...I like the extensive bibliography used demonstrating the huge research done by Mr. Kershaw, thus providing the reader with an excellent intimate..." Read more
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Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2015
Besides being strictly speaking a biography of Hitler, these two volumes make up another version of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich--that is, there is a wealth of detail about political, social, and military history. This detail can be overwhelming--keeping track of just the military leaders involved in the war is mind-boggling, since so many fell in and out of Hitler's favor over the years. There is a glossary of much-used abbreviations (SA, SS, SD, SPD, etc, etc) which is very helpful; I wish there had been something like a personnel list as well, since the cast of characters is enormous. There are a fair number of maps, but when it came to all the military maneuvering, I could have used much more help. Still, I can't recommend highly enough these two volumes to anyone curious about Hitler and his regime.
Footnote: In 2008 Kershaw abridged his 2-volume work into a shorter one (only 1072 pages!) called HITLER: A BIOGRAPHY. In September he published THE END: THE DEFIANCE AND DESTRUCTION OF HITLER'S GERMANY, 1944-1945, which I am tempted to buy, though it's hard to imagine what can be added to that subject that wasn't covered in NEMESIS.
Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2004
* it is brilliantly written
* it had access to diaries previously unavailable
* it provides perspective regarding the significance of events - Dunkirk was strategically much more important than I otherwise knew - the Battle of Britain less so - the Russian campaign seminally important
* it provides strategic analysis
* it provides vivid detail - a local enthusiast in Lithuania clubbed to death 50 Jews in 45 minutes then hopped up on to the pile of corpses and played his accordian (p.464)
* it reminds us of events such as Babi-Yar where 33,771 (mainly)women and children were butchered
* it shows why Hitler did not destroy Athens
* it shows how Stalin's deportation East of one million German-Volgas helped to galvanize action regarding the final solution.
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2001
1. I found the book to be both overinclusive and underinclusive. I mean the former in the sense that the lens of the author was so tightly focused on Hitler and Hitler only that it seems as if Hitler's every utterance, every thought, and every movement was included. The problem with this is that so many of Hitler's thoughts and sayings were repetitive that we didn't need to be advised each of the umpteenth times they occured. The author was also repetitive in his own right. For example, how often did we read the following? (10? 20? 100? In any case, TOO MANY.)
1. Hitler was determined that there would be no repeat of 1918.
2. Hitler insisted on a military success before any talk of settlement.
3. Hitler had an "either-or" way of thinking with no middle ground.
4. Hitler refused to capitulate.
5. Whenever anything went wrong, Hitler looked for scapegoats upon whom to case the blame.
6. Hitler felt the Jews and Bolsheviks were the root of all evil.
7. Hitler felt that Gemany's fortunes would turn around as soon as new weapons were developed.
8. Hitler felt betrayed by his generals.
9. Hitler ordered [fill in appropriate geographic area which was being wiped out the Allies] to be held at all costs.
10. By doing X [especially if it's something nasty against the Jews], Mr. Y was "working towards the Fuhrer". 11. The little phrases used over and over such as "pushing at an open door".
By about the 5th time I read each of these sentiments, I got the point. I didn't need to be advised another 20 times. I think that one of the "dirty little secrets" of Hitler's life is that, once the war started to go sour--say after the failure of Operation Barbarossa--his life was not only unchanging but also not all that interesting. It was just one straight downward path culminating in his ultimate suicide. It seemed as if there were no ups and downs after 1942--it was just straight down. For that reason, I feel that the second half of the book could have been shortened significantly with virtually no loss in understanding Hitler the man.
But just as I felt the book was overinclusive in terms of the author's steadfast focus on Hitler, it was also underinclusive in terms of how little attention was paid to various major events during the war. I recognize that the book was not about Nazi Germany per se and it is not called "Hitler and his times", but couldn't the author have devoted more than a few sentences to major events such as: The Warsaw Ghetto uprising? The British decoding efforts? The concentration camps? D-Day? Yalta? These events were almost completely ignored.
Finally, one trivial--but for me annoying--trait of the book--was the author's constant translation of words, phrases and sentences into German. What exactly did this add to the book? That the author knows German? That the Nazi leaders spoke in German and not in English? What was the point?? He could have knocked off 20 pages right there. I was particularly annoyed with the translation of "annihilate" to vernichten. It must be no exaggeration to say that we are given that little translation at least 50 times (particularly if you include the offshoots such as "annihilation" which are also helpfully translated for us). Did the author not feel that the first 10 times were sufficient? Also, on some occasions, we are told that "vernichten" means "annihilate", while on several other occasions, we are told it means "destroy." I don't know about German, but for my money, those words may be--but are not necessarily--synonymous.
Don't get me wrong--the book is a real achievement and "as I noted" (to use another of Kershaw's pet phrases without the royal 'we'), I would recommend it. I just think it could have been a little better.