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Hitler's table talk, 1941-1944 : his private conversations / foreword and new materials edited by Gerhard Weinberg ; preface and essay by H. R. Trevor-Roper ; translated by Norman Cameron and R. H. Stevens.

Author: Hilter, Adolf, 1889-1945.

Edition Statement:New updated ed.

Imprint:New York : Enigma Books, c2008.

Descriptionxlii, 609 p. ; 23 cm.

Note:American ed. published under the title: Secret conversations. 1941-1944.

Note:"This is the complete text of the original edition with additional documents"--T.p. verso.

Note:Foreword / by Gerhard L. Weinberg -- Preface to the third edition -- "The mind of Adolf Hitler" / by H.R. Trevor-Roper -- pt. 1. 1941 5 July-31 December -- pt. 2. 1942 1 January-5 February -- pt. 3. 1942 6 February-7 September pt. 4. 1943 13 June-24 June -- pt. 5. 1944 13 March-29-30 November -- Appendix I: New translation from the German original stenographic documents from the Library of Congress -- Appendix II: Greiner document -- Appendix III: Adolf Hitler and the post-war German birthrate, an unpublished memorandum / Oron J. Hale.

Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references and index.

Note:"Hitler's Table Talk 1941-1944 records the private, off the record, informal conversations of a man, who, more than anyone else, came close to destroying the western world." "Here is an account of Hitler freely talking about his enemies, his friends, his ambitions, his failures, his secret dreams - voicing his thoughts to his intimate associates as the sun set at the end of each day of the war. We see here a conversational Hitler letting down his guard to his trusted henchmen. Miraculously, Martin Bormann persuaded Hitler to let these talks be taken down by a team of specially picked shorthand writers. Hitler had intended, after his infamous tyranny, to use these notes as source material for the books he planned to write about the glory of the "Thousand-Year Reich." Der Fuhrer's mind was crude and narrow; he had little education and, as we see here, no humanity; but we can also see that he was (as he himself knew) a political genius, a "terrible simplifier," a man who, with no equipment except his own will power, personality and ideas, attempted to bring mankind into a terrible darkness."--Jacket.



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Author:
Hilter, Adolf, 1889-1945.
Uniform Title
Secret conversations, 1941-1944.
Subject:
Hilter, Adolf, 1889-1945.
Subject:
National socialism.
World War, 1939-1945 -- Germany.
Germany -- Politics and government -- 1933-1945.
Index Term - Genre/Form
Primary sources.
Interviews.
Contributor
Cameron, Norman, 1905-1953.
Stevens, R. H.
Trevor-Roper, H. R. (Hugh Redwald), 1914-2003.
Weinberg, Gerhard L.