Berlin Diary, 1934-1941: The Rise of the Third Reich (Illustrated Edition) by William L.Shirer
Berlin Diary, 1934-1941: The Rise of the Third Reich (Illustrated Edition) by William L.Shirer
Originally published in 1940 and 1941, this is the first edition from the Promotional Reprint Company, 1997. London. Condition: Good. Pages clean. Dust Jacket is scratched and taped up on the rear side. The book itself is in great condition. No markings. 1508g. 24x32x2.5cm.
As chief of Universal News Service's Berlin office and later a broadcaster for CBS, William Shirer witnessed and recorded the final rise to international power of Hitler and the Nazis. He arrived in Berlin in late August 1934 only a few weeks removed from the "Blood Purge" of Hitler's Storm Troopers - the S.A. (Sturmabteilung) - and the death of its leader, Ernst Röhm, Hitler's companion in the 1923 Munich beer hall Putsch. It was only a few days after the death of President von Hindenburg and Hitler's subsequent adoption of the offices of both President and Chancellor.
Shirer arrived in a Germany dominated by the Nazis and already preparing itself for confrontation with the rest of Europe. He would be an eyewitness to the major historical events leading up to the Second World War. He attended the great Nuremberg rallies and the Berlin Olympics of 1936. He witnessed the build-up of the armed forces that enabled Hitler to take action around Germany's borders: the reoccupation of the Rhineland, the annexation of Austria, the occupation of the Czech Sudetenland and the occupation of Bohemia and Moravia. In 1938 and '39, he reported on Hitler's meetings with British PM Neville Chamberlain and the crucial Hitler-Stalin Pact, which allowed for the attack on Poland that heralded the start of the Second World War.
After the attack on Poland he watched Sitzkrieg - the Phony War - become Blitzkrieg - the lightning war — as in turn Norway, Holland, Belgium, and France all fell. Shirer described for the American public the French signing of the German terms of surrender on June 21, 1940, in the carriage at Compiègne, the same location where the Armistice to end World War I was signed in November of 1918.
Shirer's diary is more than just a catalogue of political and military events: it's a thought provoking analysis by an intelligent observer of how a country can be taken over by madmen. Shirer's experiences in Germany enabled him to later write the definitive history of the Nazis, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich.