Dimensions
142 x 209 x 27mm
A gripping classic of autobiography and history, exploring how and why the Germans were seduced by Hitler and Nazism.
Sebastian Haffner was a non-Jewish German who emigrated to England in 1938. This memoir (written in 1939 but not published until now) begins in 1914 when the family summer holiday is cut short by the outbreak of war, and ends with Hitler's assumption of power in 1933.
It is a portrait of himself and his own generation in Germany, those born between 1900 and 1910, and brilliantly explains through his own experiences and those of his friends how that generation came to be seduced by Nazism and Hitler.
The Germans lacked an outlet for self-expression: where the French had amour, food and wine, and the British their gardens and their pets, the Germans had nothing, leading to a tendency towards mass psychosis. The upheaval of post-WW1 revolution, factionalism and inflation left the Germans addicted to excitement and action: Hitler provided this, and more.