"A revelatory history of the transformational decade after World War II when Germany raised itself out of the ashes of defeat, turned away from fascism, and reckoned with the corruption of its soul, and the horrors of the Holocaust"--
Methamphetamine, the Volksdroge (1933-1938) -- Sieg High! (1939-1941) -- High Hitler : Patient A and his personal physician (1941-1944) -- The wonder drug (1944-1945).
In August 1300, Italy, a war galley is discovered on the Arno River with its crew dead. Dante Alighieri, the city’s Prior, suspects poison and finds a mysterious mechanical device, believed to be crafted by the legendary Persian inventor al-Jazari.
September 29th 1938. The day the fate of Czechoslovakia was sealed by the Munich Agreement. Hitler, Mussolini, Chamberlain and - the phantom of Munich, Edouard Daladier, president of the French Council. Summer 1968. A mysterious American journalist, young, female, Czech in origin - lands on a small island in the Rhone river. Her mission is to find Edouard Daladier, who is widely believed to be dead and to persuade him, as the only living witness to the events of Munich to let her have access to his extraordinary archive and to tell her his secrets.Daladier is a recluse, obsessed with history and his part in it but the journalist succeeds in drawing from him the astonishing story of the betrayal of a nation. Scene by scene, hour by hour the reader accompanies Daladier from his departure to Munich to his triumphant, but ultimately tragic return to Paris. In Munich we sit with him and the other leaders at the negotiation table, at lunch, in and out of each other's seats, hotel rooms and cars. The tensions of the fateful day build up, the political twists and turns and the personal intensities are described with insight and humour. "The Ghost of Munich" has the sharpness of a film, the drama of tragedy and the truth of history. -- Publisher details.
At the terrible heart of the modern age lies Auschwitz. In a total inversion
of earlier hopes about the use of science and technology to improve, extend
and protect human life, Auschwitz manipulated the same systems to quite
different ends. In Sybille Steinbacher's terse, powerful new book, the reader
is led through the process by which something unthinkable to any European in
the 1930s had become a sprawling, industrial reality during the course of the
world war. How Auschwitz grew and mutated into an entire dreadful city, how
both those who managed it and those who were killed by it came to be in Poland
in the 1940s, and how it was allowed to happen, is something everyone needs to
understand.