Inside Hitler's Bunker - The Last Days of the Third Reich
A vivid reconstruction of the final weeks of Hitler’s regime. In mid-April 1945, the Soviets launched an offensive against
Berlin “with twenty armies, two and a half million soldiers, and more than forty thousand mortars and field guns”—an avenging force of an almost unimaginable size and scale. Hitler retreated into the Reich Chancellery, but not before warning that this “Asian onslaught” had to be stopped; if it
were not, he warned, Germany’s “old people, men, and children will be murdered, and women and girls will be forced to serve as barracks whores.”
Thus inspired, the Volksturm and Wehrmacht units charged with defending the city put up a stiff fight, even as
Hitler continued to imagine that with Franklin Roosevelt’s death the Western Allies would realize that their enemy
was Russia and join Hitler’s crusade.
The fall of Vienna to the Soviets put an end to that vision, and Hitler—physically and mentally ill—waited out
Marshal Zhukov’s arrival while gorging himself on chocolate cake. An inglorious end, that, and German historian Fest (Speer: The Final Verdict, 2002, etc.) surprises with a number of unreported or overlooked details—such as a letter that
Albert Speer had written to Hitler only a few weeks before, chiding him “for equating the existence of Germany with his own life span, describing this
as an egocentricity unparalleled in history.”
For all that, Hitler shot his wife and then himself, leaving it to the handful of remaining stalwarts to burn
their corpses. Fest confirms that widely published photographs of Hitler’s corpse were a hoax, but adds the
intriguing note that many of the theories concerning Hitler’s supposed survival came straight from Josef Stalin: “Once he said that Hitler
had escaped to Japan in a submarine; another time he mentioned Argentina; and later he said something about Franco’s Spain.” A well-considered slice of the Nazi era, and one with a happy
ending.
Pub Date : 01/04/2004
ISBN : 0-374-13577-0
Page count : 208pp
Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Review Posted Online : May 20th, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue : Jan. 15th, 2004
Author : Joachim Fest , translated by Margot Bettauer Dembo