Book picks similar to
Orbit of Darkness by Ian MacMillan
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Seduced by Hitler: The Choices of a Nation and the Ethics of Survival
Roger Boyes - 2000
This book reveals little-known information about regular people living under the bleak, macabre and bizarre reality of the Nazi dictatorship.
Cubeworld
Karl Olsberg - 2012
It takes him a moment to realize what‘s wrong: Everything around him is made of cubes.Haunted by skeletons, zombies, and killer cucumbers, he must find an exit from the Cubeworld. As he finally confronts the deadly enderman, there’s more at stake than just his life ...Cubeworld is the first professionally written and edited Minecraft fan fiction novel by German bestselling author Karl Olsberg.
Life & Works of Beethoven 4D
Jeremy Siepmann - 2001
Beethoven's (1770-1827) music helped define the classical style and is considered by many to be the greatest composer who ever lived.
The Prophetic Queen: The Tumultuous Life of Matilde of Ringelheim
Mirella Sichirollo Patzer - 2016
"I WAS BORN with the ability to prophesize the future. The destinies I dream about are impossible to alter, despite my many attempts to do so...nightly visions forewarn me of good fortune, but also of despair, discord, and death--always death." Matilde of Ringelheim, a paragon of virtue and achievement, a legendary woman of passion, beloved 10th-century queen, and saint of the Germanic states, was one of the most influential and charitable women in European medieval history. Her story of love, family discord, betrayal, prophetic dreams, and political intrigue is an epic account of her history. As the virtuous daughter of a noble family educated in an abbey, young Matilde faces a promising future, but she keeps a secret. Through her dreams, she can predict the future. When Duke Heinrich of Thuringia arrives unannounced at the abbey and wishes to marry Matilde, her childhood is over. At fourteen, she weds the young, enigmatic duke. She must leave everything behind and learn to navigate the intricacies and intrigues of her new life as a duchess, and later as queen. Beset by great political intrigues, a ravaged people, fraught relationships, and yet inspired to a greater calling, Matilde sees what her future could hold if she could seize the moment—if her husband will believe in and act upon her prophetic dreams.
The Woman Without A Number
Iby Knill - 2010
While there, she was caught by the Security Police, imprisoned and tortured.
Four Girls from Berlin: A True Story of a Friendship that Defied the Holocaust
Marianne Meyerhoff - 2007
The Holocaust had left Lotte the lone survivor of her family, and these precious objects gave her back a crucial piece of her past. Four Girls from Berlin vividly recreates that past and tells the story of Lotte and her courageous non-Jewish friends Ilonka, Erica, and Ursula as they lived under the shadow of Hitler in Berlin.Written by Lotte's daughter, Marianne, this powerful memoir celebrates the unseverable bonds of friendship and a rich family legacy the Holocaust could not destroy.
Hitler's Gladiator: The Life and Wars of Panzer Army Commander Sepp Dietrich
Charles Messenger - 1988
HITLER'S GLADIATOR is the life of German general Josef "Sepp" Dietrich, who rose from private soldier in the kaiser's army to command of an SS Panzer Army in the closing stage""Clear and detailed . . . most scholarly." —- "The Sunday Times" (London)"An enlightened portrait of both Dietrich and his Germany." —- "Soldier Magazine"
The Night of the Long Knives: Forty-Eight Hours That Changed the History of the World
Paul R. Maracin - 2004
The story of how Hitler seized control in Germany during his ruthless quest for world domination.
The Seduction of Eva Volk
C.D. Baker - 2009
Christians serving Hitler? Never before undertaken in a novel, 'The Seduction of Eva Volk' explores the reality of this no-so-simple paradox from the German point of view.Through the eyes of young Eva Volk, the alluring charm of the Hitler movement is personified in a lover. Desperately seeking wholeness in her broken world, she is quickly swept away by the passions of love and war...until she finds herself facing the consequences of blindness. Her's is a story that serves as a warning to us all.
Das Wirtshaus Im Spessart
Wilhelm Hauff - 1827
Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide.
A Prophet Without Honor: A Novel of Alternative History
Joseph Wurtenbaugh - 2017
Written in epistolary style and populated with interesting, fully-realized characters, the multi-general narrative is a seamless blend of authentic fact and sound speculation. The plot focuses on the one great, unrealized opportunity of the Twentieth Century. In the first months of 1936, Adolf Hitler risked everything by ordering his untrained military to reoccupy the Rhineland. It was a bluff. The Germans would have been forced to retreat if the French or British had offered the slightest opposition. But the bluff succeeded. History changed decisively. Hitler quieted the opposition at home, and marched the world relentlessly on, to the edge of destruction and beyond. The story examines that lost chance in detail. The result is a compelling story full of intrigue, danger, romance, and action, culminating in the reckoning that Hitler might have faced, had events taken a different course. It is a celebration of ordinary integrity and the enduring power of simple good will - even in times when honesty is the most dangerous virtue of all and the effects of good will seem lost in obscurity.
Die Wachsflügelfrau: Die Geschichte der Emily Kempin-Spyri
Eveline Hasler - 1994
The patient is Emily Kempin, Europe's first woman Doctor of Law and a pioneering feminist in both Europe and the United States. Born in 1853, Emily grows up protected as her father's darling. Yet, inspired by her aunt, Johanna Spyri, the world famous author of Heidi, she gradually develops into an independent woman. Emily Kempin becomes the first woman to study law at the University of Zurich, but even after she earns her doctorate, she is not allowed to try cases in court - simply because she is not a man. America is the only place at the time where a woman can hope to practice and teach law, so Emily emigrates with her family to New York. This move is made possible not only through her determined pursuit of her career, but also because her husband Walter, who doesn't suppress his feminine side, fulfills the role of homemaker for the Kempin family. Emily enters a circle of high-society feminists, and with their support starts a law school for women that is eventually adopted by New York University. With the publication of Flying with Wings of Wax Emily Kempin returns at last to America, where she set a precedent for the success of all future generations of women lawyers. Drawn from the real story of an extraordinary woman, Flying with Wings of Wax evokes all the pains and joys, the hopes, victories and defeats of a rich and tragic life.
Stealing the Future: An East German Spy Story
Max Hertzberg - 2015
After forty years of communist rule it's time for change in the GDR.Direct democracy, citizen's movements and de-centralization are changing the political landscape.But when a politician's crushed body is found a constitutional crisis erupts.Former dissident, Martin Grobe, is caught up in an investigation that points towards the KGB, the Stasi and the West Germans—but is it really the start of a putsch against the new GDR, or just a murder?
The M Room: Secret Listeners who Bugged the Nazis in WW2
Helen Fry - 2012
These grand houses were rigged with the latest and most advanced listening equipment. Bugging devices were hidden in the prisoners ‘cells, the light fittings, the fireplaces, behind mirrors, in plants and even in trees in the grounds, and wired back to the ‘M’ Room. At the heart of this clandestine unit were German-Jewish émigrés who had fled Nazi persecution and were serving in the British army. In an ironic turn of events they became British Intelligence’s most valuable asset. They were the ‘secret listeners’ and spent up to twelve hours a day eavesdropping on the conversations of German PoWs. This included not only the conversations of U-boat commanders, U-boat crew, infantry soldiers or Luftwaffe pilots but significantly 59 of Hitler’s Generals. The results were to prove astounding and beyond anything Churchill could have imagined when he authorised unlimited funds in its set-up. It gave British Intelligence unprecedented access to secrets that were not obtained by any other means. Providing a detailed, oft humorous, insight into life of the Generals in captivity, the book shows the farcical ‘stage-set’ in which they found themselves. But against this backdrop, the secret listeners eavesdropped on admission of war crimes and terrible atrocities against Russians, Poles and Jews; as well as details of an SS mutiny in a concentration camp in 1936, and Hitler’s human ‘stud farms’. This story places firmly on record just how much British Intelligence knew about the Holocaust. Why, at the end of the war, were these files not released for the war crimes trials? These and other transcripts of some of the most important German military secrets of the war remained classified until 1999.During their clandestine work the secret listeners did not set eyes on a single German PoW, yet their classified work and the intelligence they gained was as significant for winning the war as Bletchley Park and cracking the Enigma Code. For over sixty years the listeners never spoke about their work, not even to their families. Many went to their grave bearing the secrets of the nation which had saved them from certain death in the Holocaust.
The Russian Donation
Christoph Spielberg - 2001
It’s a life filled with medical work, televised soccer games, and the chill of German beer.Yet, when a former patient shows up dead by causes unknown, Hoffmann signs a death certificate that may be his own. Curiosity and sheer medical devotion propel him to investigate. However, his autopsy order goes unfulfilled as the body is cremated and hospital records vanish. Soon, Hoffmann discovers a diagnosis of conspiratorial proportions. The deeper he scans, the darker it gets, until a criminal clue emerges from Russia. Despite adversity, Hoffmann is determined to sleuth through with his own brand of logic and the aid of Celine’s powers of deduction.