|
Although
Hitler took his own life, there was no shortage of people who
wanted, and attempted, to do it for him throughout his political
career.
Drawing on newly opened archives in Germany and elsewhere, British
historian Moorhouse (Microcosm: Portrait of a Central European
City) casts a wide net, chronicling failed assassination attempts
by disaffected individuals in the early days of Hitler's reign,
such as radical university student Maurice Bavaud, whose three
easily thwarted tries in November 1938 got him guillotined; the
efforts of a British group of James Bondlike spies armed
with, among other things, "exploding rats"; and the
well-known attempts of German officers, such as Hitler's architect
Albert Speer. Moorhouse also brings to light little-known would-be-assassins,
such as members of the Polish underground. Most of the assassination
attempts Moorhouse describes failed because of poor planning;
others fell victim to circumstance, while some may simply have
been rumors, making for a compelling web of research, intrigue
and conspiracy theory.
Accessible prose, suspenseful narration and ample historical context
make this a page-turner for WWII buffs as well as anyone with
a passion for the underbelly of political power in one of the
last century's darkest regimes.
- Publishers Weekly (Mar 28, 2006)
more reviews...
|