
The Diary Of A Man In Despair
$35.15
- Paperback
264 pages
- Release Date
14 February 2013
Summary
One might expect that Friedrich Reck, a Prussian conservative aristocrat, would have supported Hitler in his quest to make Germany dominant. In fact, Reck aggressively rejected Nazism in his journals, buried in his garden at night for safekeeping, journals that Hannah Arendt called “one of the most important documents of the Hitler era.”
Hailed as one of the most important works on the Hitler period, this is an “astonishing, compelling, and unnerving” portrait of life in Nazi Germany …
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781590175866 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1590175867 |
| Author: | Friedrich Reck |
| Publisher: | New York Review Books |
| Imprint: | NYRB Classics |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 264 |
| Edition: | Main |
| Release Date: | 14 February 2013 |
| Weight: | 200g |
| Dimensions: | 170mm x 100mm x 20mm |
| Series: | New York Review Books Classics |
What They're Saying
Critics Review
‘one of the most powerful, moving and unclassifiable documents of opposition to Nazism to emerge from the Third Reich’ New Statesman ‘One of the most important personal documents to come out of the war.’ – Nicholas Lezard The Guardian
About The Author
Friedrich Reck
Friedrich Reck (1884-1945) was born Friedrich Percyval Reck in Masuria, East Prussia, the son of a prosperous conservative politician and landowner. Having initially complied with his father’s wishes to pursue a military career, he left the army to begin medical studies. By the beginning of the First World War, for which he was ruled unfit to serve, he had begun work as a full-time theater critic and travel writer. In the following decades he became a well-known figure in Munich society, the author of both literary historical novels and popular entertainments including Bomben auf Monte Carlo (Bombs on Monte Carlo), a best-selling comic novella and the basis of a hit musical film starring Peter Lorre. In October 1944 he was arrested for the first time; in December of the same year the Gestapo returned to detain him again; in January 1945 he arrived at the Dachau concentration camp, where he was to die shortly after.
Paul Rubens (1927-2003) was a self-educated native New Yorker who mastered the German language as a member of the U.S. occupation forces after World War II.
Richard J. Evans is Regius Professor of History and president of Wolfson College, Cambridge. He is the author of The Third Reich at War.
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