Il piano ideato nel 1944 per assasinare Adolf Hitler era il tentativo disperato, a opera di un guppo di ufficiali tedeschi, di redimere Ia Germania e porre fine alla seconda guerra mondiale. Fu un'impresa eroica, perché i protagonisti erano consapevoli che le loro possibilità di successo erano poche e che un eventuale fallimento li dovrebbe condotti a morte certa. Volevano lasciare un messaggio preciso alle generazioni successive: c'erano stati tedeschi che comprendendo i mali del nazismo avevano deciso di combatterlo. Una ricostruzione degli avvenimenti di quei giorni cruciali presso la Tana del lupo, quartier generale del Führer, quando i congiurati riuscirono ad arrivare a un passo dal successo.
Ian Kershaw is a British historian, noted for his biographies of Adolf Hitler. Ian Kershaw studied at Liverpool (BA) and Oxford (D. Phil). He was a lecturer first in medieval, then in modern, history at the University of Manchester. In 1983-4 he was Visiting Professor of Modern History at the Ruhr University in Bochum, West Germany. From 1987 to 1989 he was Professor of Modern History at the University of Nottingham, and since 1989 has been Professor of Modern History at Sheffield. He is a fellow of the British Academy, of the Royal Historical Society, of the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, and of the Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung in Bonn. He retired from academic life in the autumn semester of 2008.
This is an extract from Ian Kershaw's bigger biography of Hitler and is slightly disappointing. It contains lists of the people who were involved in the plot to kill Hitler in June 1944 but no biographical detail or background of each character. The most famous of the plotters, the one who delivered the bomb was Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg and it would have been nice to understand his background and motives and what lead to his final belief that Hitler should be destroyed even at serious risk to his own life, but this is left unclear. The full horror and vicious retaliation against the alleged conspirators, including their farcical show trials and executions (5,000 people were arrested in connection with the plot including families and relations of the plotters) is not conveyed with any vividness or vitality nor are the final numbers of those executed revealed. There are also memos from various Nazi party grandees and Hitler's speech to the nation on his survival included but all in all this is a rather dry and unmoving book.
Este livro foi uma inspiração para o filme de Bryan Singer, Valquíria, e isso nota-se na sua fase inicial. No final, na parte em que a operação corre mal, mostra-nos o depois daquilo que aconteceu ao povo alemão e ao III Reich.
Podemos ter pensado que esta operação correu mal, mas na verdade foi "um sinal claro de que o fim estava a chegar" e realmente após vermos que Hitler saiu ileso do desastre, mesmo com alguns ferimentos, o povo sentiu uma 'alegria' por este não ter morrido, tal como pretendiam... Mas apesar disto, ao longo dos seus discursos pós desastre, o povo começou a notar que algo não estava bem... Tudo com medo do bolchevismo...
Isto leva a que o povo alemão comece a deixar a saudação alemã 'Heil Hitler' por um simples bom dia ou "Grüb Gott".
Isto tudo no final de uma boa história contada por Ian Kershaw, vai ser fundamentada com documentos reais. Mostrando que tudo o que foi dito anteriormente era real.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Ian Kershaw conta a História como se contasse uma história: com clareza e limpidez. Não precisa de adjectivar para nos mostrar toda a selvajaria de Hitler e dos seus sequazes ou o arrependimento e o remorso que levou alguns ao desespero de tentar ver-se livres dele pondo em risco a própria vida. Um documento Formidável. Tradução satisfatória.
An excellent short read from perhaps an unsurpassed authority. A revealing page turner that shows that despite all the ‘alleged’ desire to remove Hitler, no one had the courage to sacrifice themselves in the attempts; which tells you of the fickleness of the German High Command. Recommended.
Lucky for Hitler, and no-one else Master historian Ian Kershaw concludes. How much the casualty rate would have been reduced by, nobody can ever say but an enraged Hitler upped the ante considerably after 20.07.44. They would, and did, fight to the last man...
Great chapter, but not a book in and of itself. This is simply an extract from Kershaw's biography of Hitler, and is really an attempt at cashing in on his reputation as expert on the Third Reich while taking advantage of the media-hype surrounding the release of the recent Tom Cruise film. For anyone with a passing interest in Operation Valkyrie, this is a good short account. Generally I would say buy the full two-part biography though; it is well worth it.
This book provides a brief, but reasonably detailed, description of the failed attempt to assassinate Hitler in July 1944. A number of previous attempts on Hitler's life are outlined.
Quite interesting with a reasonable amount of detail but it didn’t provide any real understanding of the motives of those involved and it didn’t mention what happened to their families (at least in the edition I read).
Would echo some other reviews of this in that it's just a chapter of Kershaw's Hitler biography repackaged as its own book. It's still good but short and I would definitely recommend the biography itself instead.