On Hitler's Mountain: My Nazi Childhood

Hardback

Main Details

Title On Hitler's Mountain: My Nazi Childhood
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Irmgard Hunt
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:288
Dimensions(mm): Height 190,Width 135
Category/GenreBiographies: Historical, Political and Military
Second world war
ISBN/Barcode 9781843544593
ClassificationsDewey:943.086092
Audience
General
Edition New edition
Illustrations b&w photos

Publishing Details

Publisher Atlantic Books
Imprint Atlantic Books
Publication Date 13 January 2006
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Irmgard Hunt was born into Nazi Germany in 1934 and brought up in the Bavarian village of Berchtesgaden, just outside the fence that surrounded Hitler's alpine retreat and headquarters. On Hitler's Mountain is her account of a childhood under the Third Reich as the daughter of low-level Party members. As a model Aryan toddler, she was photographed sitting on Hitler's knee, and attended school with the children of Albert Speer and Fritz Sauckel. Like many ordinary Germans her parents considered themselves to be moral and honourable: her father was a porcelain artist (at the workshop that provided Hitler with his dinner service) and was called up to serve in France. When he was killed early on in the war Irmgard's mother was left to bring up her two daughters in extreme deprivation. "On Hitler's Mountain" accesses a period and location in history that is becomingly increasingly remote to us today (Hunt was born five years later than Anne Frank) but which has never been the subject of a general trade book written in English. In simple, powerful prose Hunt reveals the creeping Nazification of Germany and shows how vulnerable, ordinary people were seduced - and cowed - by the campaigns set in train by their leaders. It is a fascinating and illuminating account of daily life under the Nazis and a clear-eyed portrait of a nation that lost its way.

Author Biography

Irmgard Hunt was born in Germany in 1934 and left for New York in 1958. She was prompted to write a memoir of her childhood when her son, an historian born in the US, began to ask about her Nazi past. She lives in Washington D.C.

Reviews

"* 'An important book... supremely honest, attractively written... particularly valuable as an intimate glimpse into the Hitler dictatorship' Peter Gay * 'Richly textured... Hunt's moving, unsettling memoir... relates the normal part of childhood interspersed with the extraordinary events' Publisher's Weekly * 'A poignant, valuable account' Booklist"