The true story of a Jewish reporter who became an intimate witness to the rise of Nazism in Germany. Fromm wrote a social column for a liberal Berlin newspaper. Attending luncheons, teas & dinners during the 1930s, she met everybody of importance, including von Hindenberg, Franz von Papen, Goebbels, Goering, Himmler, Leni Riefenstahl, & other political & social figures. In this secret journal, smuggled out piecemeal before she left Germany, Fromm describes her experiences & conversations with this cast of characters that would soon play shocking roles in Hitler's Third Reich. Her diary is a classic social & historical testament.
Fascinating ... I had a library copy and just ordered my own from amazon ... the kind of reference I will return to again and again as I write the sequel to A Flood of Evil. Frau Bella offers candid observations on everything.
It has been alleged by Henry Turner that much of Fromm's diary was fabricated after the fact, when she had emigrated to America and needed the book revenues. I haven't read Turner's report, and there are some passages that seem exaggerated, but most of it rings true to me.
This is one of the best 'diaries' or memoirs I have read concerning the Third Reich. Bella Fromm was a German Jewish woman who worked as a social columnist until the Nazis forbade Jews from being published under their own names. She traveled in international and diplomatic circles and met/observed all of the top Nazis, including Hitler. Her diary traces the beginnings of Hitler and his policies from the 20's up until 1938 when she was finally able to emigrate to the United States. It's very interesting, and I highly recommend it.
I would love to know what happened to Frau Fromm and her daughter after she finally got settled here but have been unable to find any information.
A fascinating view of Berlin in the early Hitler years. This is the personal journal of a german Jewish society columnist who travelled in connected diplomatic circles. She shares personal observations and comments on leading german figures, up to and including Hitler. She also astutely notes the self-justification of Germans who claim not to support nazism, yet go along with it. Since this was a personal journal, it’s anecdotal, without any true narrative. Adds an interesting angle to Hitler’s accumulation of power.
Het boek leest vlot als een historische roman, helaas is dit verhaal geen fictie. Je leeft mee met alles wat ze meemaakt en krijgt het er benauwd van. Ongelooflijk wat men heeft moeten doorstaan, alleen al in het gewone leven, toentertijd.
Boek zit vol met namen van politieke personen van die tijd. Fijn dat er soms even wat achtergrondinformatie wordt gegeven.