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Hitler's Private Library
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About the Author

Timothy W. Ryback is the author of The Last Survivor: Legacies of Dachau, a New York Times Notable Book for 1999. He has written for The Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times. He is cofounder and codirector of the Institute for Historical Justice and Reconciliation and lives in Paris with his wife and three children.

Reviews

“Elegantly written, meticulously researched. . . . Thought-provoking. . . . Ryback has produced a valuable short addition to attempts to understand this strange man whose impact on the world was so baleful.”
—Ian Kershaw, The New York Sun

“Fascinating. . . . Thanks to Ryback’s imaginative research . . . we come closer to one of the most elusive men ever to shape world history. . . . His effort is worthwhile: one finishes this short, packed book with a firmer take on the sort of intellectual—or pseudo-intellectual—who persuaded the best-educated nation in Europe to make war on civilization and try to exterminate the Jews.”
—The New Republic

“Ryback’s portrait is both original and rewarding. . . . Certain to arouse widespread curiosity.”
—New York Review of Books

“Intriguing. . . . [Ryback is] the perfect guide, intelligent, well-informed, and careful.”
—The Seattle Times

“Finely written. . . . Unique in its focus. . . . A fresh perspective on a figure who has spawned countless biographies yet remains one of the 20th century’s indecipherable enigmas.”
—Financial Times

“Remarkably absorbing. . . . A tantalizing glimpse into Hitler’s creepy little self-improvement program. While being a bookworm may not be a precondition for becoming a mass murderer, it’s certainly no impediment.”
—Jacob Heilbrunn, The New York Times Book Review

“Ryback writes gracefully, and the story he weaves around the books from Hitler’s private library . . . offers fresh perspectives. . . . Deftly, and with an economy of words, he sketches the future dictator’s transition from young volunteer to bitter and hardened soldier.”
—Boston Globe

“Crisply written. . . . Thoroughly engrossing. . . . Fascinating—and unnerving.”
—The Washington Post Book World

“Irresistible. . . . Approaching Hitler from an unexpected angle, Ryback isn’t adding a gimmicky volume to the vast bibliography: he’s shedding more light on the man than I have found in many full-dress studies.”
—John Wilson, Christianity Today

“Hitler’s Private Library provides a warning against the dangers of blind adherence to ideology and the damage that a deal of selective reading can do.”
—The Sunday Times (London)

“Ryback neatly weaves together Hitler’s political career with his book-collecting habits. . . . He has done a good job maintaining a balance between dispassionate inquiry and moral revulsion.”
—The Economist

“Ryback has penetrated the brutality of the Holocaust and found that its origins are inescapably literary. Hitler’s Private Library is not merely a deft intellectual history of Nazism . . . it charts the way reading can undo all that we expect from it.”
—Bookforum

“An absorbing account of a reader who professed to love books but burned them anyway.”
—Newsday

“[A] landmark study in the evolution of the Third Reich.”
—Sacramento Book Review

“In Hitler’s Private Library, Ryback turns Hitler’s reading into a way of reading Hitler—his mind, his obsessions, his evolution. It’s an original and provocative work that adds valuable context to the skeletal and mystifying historical record.”
—Ron Rosenbaum, author of Explaining Hitler

“Hitler’s Private Library is a meticulously researched and highly original focus on one of history’s most enigmatic figures. Ryback shines his laser-like perceptions into the library and mind of Adolf Hitler in a way no previous book has done. Anyone even vaguely interested in the uses and misuses of ‘a little bit of knowledge’ and ideology will marvel—and shudder—at Ryback’s riveting insights.”
—Steven Bach, author of LENI: The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl

“Fascinating. . . . Hitler’s Private Library will appeal to anyone interested in what books mean to us, and is ‘must’ reading for anyone who doubts the power of written words to sway the human imagination toward good or evil.”
—Sacramento News & Review (A Best Book of 2008)

Hitler's personal library of over 16,000 volumes was picked clean by American troops. But Ryback found 1,200 of Hitler's volumes in the Library of Congress and other caches scattered through the U.S. and Europe. By looking at the books Hitler read (sometimes obsessively, judging from marginalia and other signs of wear and tear), Ryback paints an unusually vivid and nuanced portrait of the dictator. Among the authors and works Hitler was most interested in were Shakespeare (in translation), whose grand historical subjects, Hitler felt, made him superior to Schiller and Goethe; Henry Ford's anti-Semitic The International Jew; adventure novelist Karl May; Dietrich Eckart's interpretation of Ibsen's Peer Gynt; works of the occult and esoterica; and Thomas Carlyle, particularly his biography of Frederick the Great. Ryback (The Last Survivor: Legacies of Dachau) offers a unique view of Hitler's intellectual life. 47 photos. (Oct. 22) Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

"Elegantly written, meticulously researched. . . . Thought-provoking. . . . Ryback has produced a valuable short addition to attempts to understand this strange man whose impact on the world was so baleful."
-Ian Kershaw, The New York Sun

"Fascinating. . . . Thanks to Ryback's imaginative research . . . we come closer to one of the most elusive men ever to shape world history. . . . His effort is worthwhile: one finishes this short, packed book with a firmer take on the sort of intellectual-or pseudo-intellectual-who persuaded the best-educated nation in Europe to make war on civilization and try to exterminate the Jews."
-The New Republic

"Ryback's portrait is both original and rewarding. . . . Certain to arouse widespread curiosity."
-New York Review of Books

"Intriguing. . . . [Ryback is] the perfect guide, intelligent, well-informed, and careful."
-The Seattle Times

"Finely written. . . . Unique in its focus. . . . A fresh perspective on a figure who has spawned countless biographies yet remains one of the 20th century's indecipherable enigmas."
-Financial Times

"Remarkably absorbing. . . . A tantalizing glimpse into Hitler's creepy little self-improvement program. While being a bookworm may not be a precondition for becoming a mass murderer, it's certainly no impediment."
-Jacob Heilbrunn, The New York Times Book Review

"Ryback writes gracefully, and the story he weaves around the books from Hitler's private library . . . offers fresh perspectives. . . . Deftly, and with an economy of words, he sketches the future dictator's transition from young volunteer to bitter and hardened soldier."
-Boston Globe

"Crisply written. . . . Thoroughly engrossing. . . . Fascinating-and unnerving."
-The Washington Post Book World

"Irresistible. . . . Approaching Hitler from an unexpected angle, Ryback isn't adding a gimmicky volume to the vast bibliography: he's shedding more light on the man than I have found in many full-dress studies."
-John Wilson, Christianity Today

"Hitler's Private Library provides a warning against the dangers of blind adherence to ideology and the damage that a deal of selective reading can do."
-The Sunday Times (London)

"Ryback neatly weaves together Hitler's political career with his book-collecting habits. . . . He has done a good job maintaining a balance between dispassionate inquiry and moral revulsion."
-The Economist

"Ryback has penetrated the brutality of the Holocaust and found that its origins are inescapably literary. Hitler's Private Library is not merely a deft intellectual history of Nazism . . . it charts the way reading can undo all that we expect from it."
-Bookforum

"An absorbing account of a reader who professed to love books but burned them anyway."
-Newsday

"[A] landmark study in the evolution of the Third Reich."
-Sacramento Book Review

"In Hitler's Private Library, Ryback turns Hitler's reading into a way of reading Hitler-his mind, his obsessions, his evolution. It's an original and provocative work that adds valuable context to the skeletal and mystifying historical record."
-Ron Rosenbaum, author of Explaining Hitler

"Hitler's Private Library is a meticulously researched and highly original focus on one of history's most enigmatic figures. Ryback shines his laser-like perceptions into the library and mind of Adolf Hitler in a way no previous book has done. Anyone even vaguely interested in the uses and misuses of 'a little bit of knowledge' and ideology will marvel-and shudder-at Ryback's riveting insights."
-Steven Bach, author of LENI: The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl

"Fascinating. . . . Hitler's Private Library will appeal to anyone interested in what books mean to us, and is 'must' reading for anyone who doubts the power of written words to sway the human imagination toward good or evil."
-Sacramento News & Review (A Best Book of 2008)

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