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A Village in the Third Reich

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New from the author of Travellers in the Third Reich – the Sunday Times Top Three bestseller and Waterstones Book of the Month: a stunningly evocative portrait of Hitler’s Germany through the people of a single village.

Oberstdorf is a beautiful village high up in the Bavarian Alps, a place where for hundreds of years ordinary people lived simple lives while history was made elsewhere. Yet even here, in the farthest corner of Germany, National Socialism sought to control not only people’s lives but also their minds.

Drawing on archive material, letters, interviews and memoirs, A Village in the Third Reich is an extraordinarily intimate portrait of Germany under

Hitler, of the descent into totalitarianism and of the tragedies that befell all of those touched by Nazism. In its pages we meet the Jews who survived – and those who didn’t; the Nazi mayor who tried to shield those persecuted by the regime; and a blind boy whose life was thought ‘not worth living’.

It is a tale of conflicting loyalties and desires, of shattered dreams, despair and destruction – but one in which, ultimately, human resilience triumphs.

These are the stories of ordinary lives at the crossroads of history.

505 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 5, 2022

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5089 people want to read

About the author

Julia Boyd

17 books79 followers
Julia Boyd is the author of A Dance with the Dragon: The Vanished World of Peking's Foreign Colony, The Excellent Doctor Blackwell: The Life of the First Woman Physician and Hannah Riddell: An Englishwoman in Japan. An experienced researcher, she has scoured archives all over the world to find original material for her books. As the wife of a former diplomat, she lived in Germany from 1977 to 1981. A former trustee of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, she now lives in London.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 339 reviews
Profile Image for Beata .
903 reviews1,385 followers
April 27, 2022
Oberstdorf is one of the most famous places in Bavaria owing to ski jumping competitions and magnificent scenery for tourists to admire both in summer and winter. Ms Boyd's idea to describe life in a village during the inter-war period sounds interesting as most of the books cover towns or cities whereas countrylife is rather obscure.
This non-fiction depicts the cultural, social and political changes over the 40 years in a village whose life focused around sheep breeding, some farming and tourist industry as Obersdorf became more and more popular in the covered period. Such a detailed analysis was possible due to vast archives preserved and to memoirs, letters and memories of those whose ancestors lived in the village before the WW2 and through it.
I enjoyed this book since it gives a panorama of those days, desciribing attitudes, hardships and tragedies which affected the small village. It is a well-researched book which offers a good insight into the period.
*Many thanks to Julia Boyd, Elliot & Thompson, and NetGalley for arc in exchange for my honest review.*
Profile Image for None Ofyourbusiness Loves Israel.
873 reviews177 followers
December 16, 2025
A postcard perfect Bavarian Alpine village called Oberstdorf. Mountains. Cows. Churches. People who think a wild night out is discussing politics at the regular table while pretending not to hate their neighbors. In waltzes the wrecking ball of history.

The book tracks this village from the aftermath of the First World War through the chaotic twenties, the rise of the Nazis, the dictatorship, the war, and the rubble filled aftermath. The village is a snow globe someone keeps shaking, and the villagers keep insisting the flakes are part of the charm.

At first, Oberstdorf is exhausted from the Great War and mostly wants bread, heat, and for Munich to stop having revolutions every ten minutes. Some locals come back from the front proud of their service, others come back missing limbs or kitbags stolen somewhere between the Rhine and home. Everyone else is busy trying to figure out how to feed a family on rations that look like a bad joke. As national politics spiral into chaos, the villagers cling to what they know. Church. Farming. A healthy dislike of Prussians. The usual.

Then the tourists come. Thousands of them, most from the north, many of them Jewish. This causes culture shock among locals who think dancing is suspicious and trousers on women are borderline apocalyptic.

Germany's economy collapses, inflation eats money like a goat eats laundry, and Oberstdorf starts paying salaries in milk because actual currency has decided to retire from its job.

In this mess, the early Nazis try to set up shop in the village. It goes about as well as trying to sell sand in a sandbox. The locals mostly roll their eyes, although a few hot blooded patriots, romantics, and people who just like uniforms begin to listen.

Nothing moves quickly until the Depression arrives and suddenly the loud men talking about betrayal, national destiny, and the glorious future start sounding tempting. This is the pattern everywhere in Germany, but the village scale makes it painfully clear how ordinary people take that step and why.

Once Hitler takes power, the village discovers that National Socialism is not a menu but a full course meal you cannot send back. A new Nazi mayor arrives, determined to run Oberstdorf like his own laboratory for perfect German life.

Traditions are rewritten. Clubs are reshaped. Priests and nuns find themselves squeezed between their faith and the new state. There are locals who cooperate happily, others who grit their teeth, and still others who learn the hard way that the system has no patience for criticism.

Then the war arrives. Young men march off. Their families wait for letters and fear the ones with black borders. Soldiers come home for leave and talk about Russia in the tone people usually reserve for describing haunted houses or dental drills. The village fills with refugees from bombed cities, forced laborers for nearby factories, and reminders that no place is truly remote once the Reich needs bodies.

Some Nazis in the village behave exactly as you expect. Others surprise you by quietly protecting Jews or helping the vulnerable. Ordinary life continues through it all: skiing competitions, church committees, petty rivalries, funerals with too few bodies to bury, and neighbors trying to stay decent in a system designed to grind decency down.

As the war breaks Germany apart, Oberstdorf feels the collapse in real time. Starving refugees, approaching Allied troops, rumors of Russian vengeance, and the knowledge that the state everyone saluted for years is suddenly evaporating like fog.

After surrender comes the reckoning. Some villagers face denazification hearings. Others pretend they never liked Hitler anyway. Everyone tries to rebuild a life out of what remains, which in most cases is not much.

The story is the slow, believable, exasperating way a normal place gets caught in a vortex of ideology and violence. It is a biography of a village that did not ask for history but got dragged into it anyway.

No spoilers, because nonfiction ruins the suspense by being, well, nonfiction. The ending is the world we already know.

The book is solid. Painfully solid. Rock in your shoe solid. It is careful, it is thorough, and it is the historical equivalent of someone taking you by the shoulders, turning your head toward the past, and saying: Look. I know you think you already know this story, but look again. You missed a few things.

You get this whole parade of villagers who think they are too clever, too old fashioned, too busy, or too harmless to get swept up in anything dangerous. And then it happens anyway, one decision at a time. Nobody wakes up cheering for tyranny. They ease into it like a warm bath. A few splash all the way in. A few keep their socks on. A few have the nerve to climb right back out.

History lives in ordinary people who think their choices do not matter. A dictatorship is not built by villains in a volcano lair. It is built by those who adapt, compromise, shrug, avoid conflict, or tell themselves that politics is above their pay grade. It is built by the butcher, the mayor, the priest, the ski instructor, the guy who sweeps chimneys, and the woman who writes opinionated editorials and somehow keeps going.

There is no clean moral category called the good villagers and the bad villagers. Everyone is a mess of fear, pride, loyalty and self interest. The book does not let you rest in any comfortable judgment. And honestly, that is probably the most honest thing about it.

People love a strong leader who will clean things up. People convince themselves that justice can be postponed for the sake of order. People cling to safety until safety becomes the joke.

It is one thing to hear thirty million. It is another to watch a farmer, a nun, a mayor and a teenage recruit move through the same nightmare at different angles.

The book makes one thing painfully clear: antisemitism in Oberstdorf was not some eternal Alpine tradition but a toxin that seeped in through national politics, economic collapse, fear, and the seductive nonsense of scapegoating.

Before Hitler, the village treated Jewish visitors the same way it treated every outsider: with a mix of curiosity, annoyance, and the usual Bavarian suspicion that anyone wearing unfamiliar clothes is probably up to something. But there was no deep local hunger for hatred.

Then the propaganda starts dripping in from Munich. Posters appear. Graffiti shows up. Newspapers out of town publish insulting caricatures of Jewish tourists. Some villagers embrace it, because it gives them a neat explanation for inflation and humiliation and whatever else is gnawing at them. Others quietly resist it because they actually know the people being slandered. It is harder to demonize someone whose ski lessons you took last winter.

What the book shows beautifully and painfully is how antisemitism grows in the cracks of ordinary frustration. People get tired, scared, and restless. They want a simple reason for why their lives feel chipped around the edges. The Nazis hand them that reason wrapped in poisonous certainty, and for some people it feels like relief. That is the ugliest part. Hate feels like relief to the right person at the wrong moment.

The fate of Jews in the village during the regime is complicated. Some locals protect them. Others gleefully denounce them. Some officials enforce the rules gently. Others enforce them with zeal. It is not a fairy tale with bright lines; it is human behavior under stress. And the stress comes from a government that celebrates local bigotry and turns it into law.

As for whether this matters now, you already know the answer. Antisemitism never dies. It hides, waits, and resurfaces whenever people start craving easy explanations for hard problems. The book is basically holding up a mirror and saying: this is how ordinary people drift into extraordinary cruelty. If you do not pay attention, the drift repeats.

The Jewish story in this book is not a side plot. It is the moral red thread running through the whole thing. It shows you who people become when prejudice is rewarded. It shows you who they become when conscience refuses to sleep. And it leaves you with the uncomfortable truth that either outcome is always possible.
Profile Image for Pooja Peravali.
Author 2 books110 followers
March 29, 2022
Wars come and go, but life goes on. And so it went on in the village of Oberstdorf throughout the 1930s and 1940s, with the rise and fall of Nazism an undercurrent all along – except it was one that swelled in a way that even a quiet little village couldn’t ignore.

A few years ago I took a class called Experiencing Total War, in which I learned about what it was like for the average person to live through the world wars. It was a fascinating class that highlighted the ordinary voices of war, and it remains one of my favorite classes I ever took. It was on the strength of this that I picked up this book, for that is its purpose – seeing how the Third Reich unfolded in an ordinary Bavarian village.

For the most part I found this an interesting read. The book is well-researched and delves into many aspects of life during the Third Reich, showing how the government pervaded every part of one’s daily activities. I liked that the chapters were organized thematically rather than chronologically, which made it easier to follow.

There were some quite emotional parts to the story – for example I doubt I will ever forget the chapter on how the regime murdered people with disabilities which depicted the injustice through a case study. However, for the most part I had some trouble following who was who, despite the list of townspeople at the back of the book, and this kept me from getting too emotionally invested.

Overall an interesting read about life during World War 2.

Disclaimer: I received an ARC of this book from NetGalley. This is my honest and voluntary review.
Profile Image for Susan.
3,018 reviews570 followers
March 31, 2022
Having read, and enjoyed, Julia Boyd’s previous book, “Travellers in the Third Reich,” I was eager to read her new title, which looks at the Third Reich from the viewpoint of the Bavarian village of Oberstdorf. This was a largely Catholic village at the time, the most southern village in Germany, a farming community which became a tourist destination thanks to the mountains and with the first concentration camp of Dachau close by. As such, this detailed look at what happened from the end of the First World War to the devastation of the end of the Second World War gives the reader a very personal view of events from a number of the village’s inhabitants.

Boyd makes full use of memoirs, local newspapers, letters, and other research to tell the story of one, rural community, during a time of national change. She takes us from soldiers returning from the trenches of WWI, through the political turmoil of hyperinflation and the Weimar Republic, to the regime of the Third Reich, which promised so much but delivered devastation.

Oberstdorf was a village where food was scarce and people poor after WWI, until tourism became a growing source of income. Alpine beauty, a new cable car, and the growth of visitors brought new prosperity to the village. Many of the villagers viewed Hitler with distrust and Bolshevism with fear, but the villages new mayor, Ernst Zeitler, was unpopular as he expected the villagers to conform to Nazi ideology and policy. Many, such as Dr Otto Reh, Chairman of the local Fishing Society, resigned when it was proposed that Jewish members should be banned – even though there were none. Others resented the suggestion Jewish shops be boycotted, even though there weren’t any Jewish shop owners. However, despite these noble intentions, Boyd is good at showing how much of life is not black or white, but shades of grey. For most inhabitants, they feared war, disliked the fact that Nazi ideology changed their lives and often took the line of least resistance and hoped to come through unscathed.

Of course, there are acts of defiance and bravery, those who worked for the regime but retained their humanity towards others, such as the new Mayor, who was moderate and generally bent the rules as far as he was able. Still, even for this small, remote village, the new regime changed all aspects of their lives, from education through to religion. Locals deemed ‘undesirable,’ or who were Jewish, were in constant danger – many killed or forced into suicide, making this an often sobering read. For most, it was obvious fairly soon that the country was headed for defeat and disaster. This is an excellent social history, which makes the reality of those years personal and immediate and shows the discomfort that many had at that time. I received a cop of this book from the publisher, via NetGalley, for review.
Profile Image for Melindam.
885 reviews406 followers
February 7, 2024
Village in the Third Reich is a thoroughly-researched and well-presented history of the village Oberstdorf in Bavaria from 1919 to the end of World War II and beyond.

I have read quite a few book on several aspects of World War II, but this has been the first time that I read about it from the point of view of "everyday" German people and how they lived through it all. Julia Boyd absolutely managed to capture all aspects of their lives shown though the context of the mundane and the historical.

She handled it all with sensitivity, but the required "aloofness" and this made all the stories especially poignant to read about.

Absolutely recommended.

ARC provided by the publisher Elliott & Thompson via Netgalley for an honest review.
Profile Image for Pam Baddeley.
Author 2 books64 followers
December 27, 2022
An interesting alternative take on Nazi Germany, seen through the microcosm of a small alpine village, the southernmost in the country, on the border with Austria and near beautiful mountain ranges. The scene is set, starting just after the First World War, progressing through the rise to power of Hitler, the take over of all aspects of daily life by the Nazi state and the eventual build up and waging of war and its aftermath A few people were opposed to the Nazis but kept their heads down, aware of the grim fate of those who spoke out, about ten percent were members of the party and the rest weren't bothered about what the Nazis did to certain groups, such as the Jews, as long as they provided full employment and gave Germany back its self respect and prestige after the humiliation of the defeat in WWI and the treaty of Vienna. Some of those gradually experienced doubts once the Nazis dragged the country into a second world war.

The book is meticulously researched, helped by very good records kept in the village itself and some unpublished diaries including a couple of soldiers' diaries from the regiments in which villagers served. The chapters are organised thematically which is a help, as it would probably be too bitty with a chronological approach. As it is, there are a huge number of people mentioned and I referred to the index and the list of people at the back quite frequently to remind myself who was who. Some were mentioned only once and possibly some of those could be dropped.

The most harrowing chapter is a case study of a young man blind from birth who was one of the victims of the "euthanasia" programme which was designed to get rid of the disabled, seen by the Nazis as a burden and a blot on the perfect master race. I had read about this programme before, in the context of its being the forerunner of the Final Solution, whereby the Nazis practiced the methods they eventually used on the Jews, and other "racial undesirables" such as Gypsies. The book possibly does fall down in not making that connection especially as the chapter on how village Jews were affected doesn't convey the full horror - some were helped to commit suicide before deportation, some managed to leave the country, and some were hidden, or shielded by the mayor, a "good Nazi". As far as I recall, only a couple of people were actually deported to camps and they managed to survive and return to the village after the war. The Jews always formed a tiny minority in the village so that part of the book isn't really representative of a lot of other, often more urban, communities.

The book is very detailed and in some cases, such as the account of infighting among the local Nazis, becomes a bit too much so and drags a bit. I found the postwar section also does this and so many people are mentioned in the book that it would be nice to have a bit more depth on some and fewer sketchy mentions in passing, but I suppose the material just doesn't exist. Overall, I rate the book as 4 stars.
Profile Image for Richard Chambers.
Author 1 book111 followers
January 31, 2023
First 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 of the year. Fascinating, compelling account of one tiny village's journey through the rise of fascism in Germany. By following the villagers of Oberstdorf throughout the decades, Julia Boyd hammers home a brutally effective way of detailing the horrors of Nazism and the humanity of those who suffered at its hands.

The insidious creep of totalitarianism, racism, and fanaticism is so well documented through every minute detail of life in Oberstdorf. Highly recommend!
Profile Image for Ophelia.
513 reviews15 followers
September 13, 2022
A Masterpiece.

A study of Nazi Germany from the end of WWI to the end of WWII told through the lives of people in one Bavarian village in the Alps.

This is brilliantly done. If you have an interest in history and looking for a captivating read that doesn’t shy away from discussing ordinary people’s potential culpability then read this book. There is something disarming about reading this book too as it makes one question one’s own culpability when we know terrible things are happening in the world around us.

It really brings history to life. I can’t recommend it enough.
Profile Image for Len.
711 reviews22 followers
December 15, 2023
An interesting study on the spread and influence of Nazism in the 1930s and through the Second World War. The authors chose the village of Oberstdorf in the far south of Bavaria because the local authorities had preserved so many records from the period. For the book it is a good choice to have a small community from which individual lives can be extracted and brought to life rather than a large town or city in which so many citizens are anonymous. The downside is that one wonders if German villages provided the lifeblood of the Party. If the Party's strength lay in Munich, Berlin, Nuremberg, Cologne, Hamburg and so on, the study becomes distorted and may give an impression that a significant number of the population were either anti-Nazi or ambivalent to its demands and messages.

At times there seems to be a search going on to find "good Nazis", the Party members who showed humanity to local people they knew including members of the Jewish community. However, although such people were undoubtedly there, and no doubt in every village, town and suburb, there is always the shadow of 'how much did they know?' How much did the Party draw them into its ideologies and policies of extermination and social control?

The portraits painted by the authors are vivid and moving and, apart from the most devoted of the Nazi members, one has great sympathy for their situation. Obey Party orders and at least give a show of obedience and you will be allowed to live relatively unmolested, have a job, and never see the inside of Dachau. Would I have reacted any differently to the majority had I been there? I am certainly no hero so I don't have an answer, and not being able to respond how can I criticize others? There are so many people in the world who now are facing a similar situation with the rise in populist and fundamentalist governments. Perhaps the time will come even in the UK when I will be tested.
511 reviews8 followers
May 23, 2023
A historical work is most easily followed when tightly centered around a main figure or a few main figures and one can see how they have done over time. Here, the author follows a whole village. It is impossible to keep all the villagers clear in one’s head, and the book just goes on and on and on. The chapters are well organized but the pacing feels incredibly slow. Also this book very much minimized what happened to the Jews, just by picking a town that didn’t have a lot of Jews in the first place.
Unfortunately, this book reads like a 400 page Wikipedia article. It is clearly well-researched and informative, but there’s no story, no coherence. Would not recommend.

I am grateful for the opportunity to read this book pre-publication through the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Paul.
1,190 reviews75 followers
February 26, 2022
A Village in the Third Reich – What Happened in a Beautiful Village

Julia Boyd has once again written an enticing history of Germany, coming at it from a different perspective than usual histories. Boyd the author of the author of Travellers in the Third Reich which was a best-selling history will once again make the charts with this book. This time looking at the Third Reich through the picturesque village of Oberstdorf in the mountains of Bavaria.

Today Oberstdorf is a destination village for those who love alpine and winter sports in winter and mountain climbing in summer. It is the southernmost village in Germany and one of its highest towns, with the next stop being Austria. Before tourism arrived in the nineteenth century the village subsisted on farming.

Boyd using unpublish diaries is able to follow the lives of the villagers and their day to day encounters with the rise of the Nazis, through to the end of the war when the village was occupied first by the French and then the Americans. What emerges is a picture is how some supported the Nazis other adapted to survive and how some knew it was best not to say what they thought out aloud.

It was during the 1920s that Oberstdorf started to develop a substantial tourist trade as a holiday resort. Oberstdorf was in the main an observant Catholic village with a small Protestant church. In politics the village supported the centre-right Catholic Bavarian People’s Party. Oberstdorf was doing quite well in the 1930s and many of its were wealthy and they also had distinguished Jewish visitors.

Nazi history began in the village in 1927 when a postman, Karl Weinlein transferred into the village from Nuremberg. Weinlein had a better NSDAP party membership number than Goebbels. A low party number conferred on Weinlein hallowed status within the Party. The villages were reluctant to join, but the Wall Street crash did offer fertile ground even in Oberstdorf.

In the election of 1930 on a village turnout of 70% the NSDAP won more votes than any other of the Parties which had stood. It was found that Protestants were more likely to vote for the Nazis, but all the same they received a substantial vote from the Catholics. It also showed that in 1933 the taking over of the machinery of Government at every level. It also showed how petty the Nazis could be amongst themselves, especially when the first two Nazi mayors were “moved” rather quickly. It also shows how there could be compassionate Nazi mayors such as Mayor Fink who lasted throughout the war years until the surrender and occupation.

We learn that many of the younger members of the Village when war came were members of the 98th or 99th Mountain Battalions part of the 1st Mountain Division, which was an elite division. It also committed war crimes in the later war in Greece. But also other members of the village were part of the suppression of partisans and Jews in Ukraine. One also supervised the killing of 700 Jews in Ukraine.

Dachau was to the north of the Oberstdorf, but the villages were already aware of some of the Nazi round-ups of its citizens, especially the Jews. By 1941 most were well aware of the roundups that had been undertaken in the East in their name. This leaked out via the Feldpost, or when soldiers were on leave at home.

When it came to the end of the war the propaganda machine which they had lived under for the previous 12 years, they were fearful for their lives. Stories about what the Russians were doing were widespread and all they could do was hope that it would not be the Russians who came. In the end the village surrendered to the French in May 1945, before the Americans took over in the July.

At the end of the war a list of the Nazis in the village was completed from various sorts. From an incomplete list it was found that there were 455 names on the list, roughly 10% of the village, which also happened to mirror the Nazis membership across Germany.

Today the only visible scars of the war and the Nazi years can be found in the memorial chapel, where the names of the 286 Oberstdorfers killed in the Second World War are carved in stone. Some families never forgave their neighbours for what happened, while others tried to forget. But what cannot be seen is the invisible scars of the Third Reich which will always remain part of the village’s history.

This is a wonderful micro-history of the Third Reich using the village as an exemplar of the ordinary German in those fateful years. It brings to life some of the difficulties for some and how easy it was for others to do nothing. Everybody made their decision which is clear and had to live with it.

As a book that brings to bear what was happening in Germany at the time it brings a fresh and new perspective. Germany during the Third Reich needs to be focused on the people not just the military and political leaders. This book does that, very well.
Profile Image for Lucia Nieto Navarro.
1,386 reviews361 followers
September 30, 2025
4,5

Nos encontramos ante una lectura de no ficción, un ensayo sobre uno de los temas mas escritos y de los que mas documentación podemos encontrarnos hoy en día, pero “Un pueblo en el tercer Reich” ofrece una manera diferente de acercarse a este momento histórico.
La premisa es mostrar como un pueblo conservador y católico, una comunidad agrícola que se convirtió en destino turístico por sus montañas y también por su proximidad al primer campo de concentración de Dachau, termino “abrazando” al nazismo, vivió bajo el dominio del partido nazi, vivió la guerra y la dura posguerra.
La historia ofrece al lector una visión muy personal de los acontecimientos desde el punto de vista de diferentes habitantes del pueblo, las autoras hacen un uso exhaustivo de memorias, periódicos locales, cartas para contar la historia.
Los personajes que aparecen en este ensayo están relacionados de una forma u otra con Oberstdof, desde familias que llevaban viviendo años allí, como visitantes que iban durante el verano. Muestran como poco a poco el partido nazi fue creciendo, y como los cambios ocurren de manera exponencial en la forma de vida de cada uno.
Nos narran la perdida de libertad, la presión sobre los judíos y todas su prohibiciones, y nos cuenta la importancia que tuvo las organizaciones hitlerianas en los jóvenes. Nos hablaran de Dachau, ese campo de concentración tan cercano a este pueblo, el primer campo destinado sobretodo a políticos y disidentes.
ME ha gustado mucho la estructura de la historia a través de cartas, periódicos o diarios de algunos personajes importantes, haciendo que la historia sea mas cercana y menos densa. Además las autoras se centran en ciertos habitantes y a través de sus vidas iremos conociendo otras, haciendo que parezca una novela, mas que en un ensayo. No vas a encontrar un ensayo como tal, es una historia que busca contar, sin juzgar, como fue la vida en un pueblo en pleno Reich.
Novela densa, pero a la vez una magnifica historia que disfrutaras si te gusta este tema, o si quieres saber más cosas sobre este momento histórico.
Profile Image for Verena Wachnitz.
211 reviews26 followers
July 28, 2025
Microhistory at its best - detailed, engaging and thought-provoking account of the lives of the inhabitants of a village in the southwest of Bavaria during the rise of Nazism, WW2 and its aftermath.
Profile Image for Dem.
1,263 reviews1,432 followers
August 5, 2022
Review to follow
Profile Image for Ian Gillibrand.
67 reviews11 followers
October 20, 2023
An absolute masterpiece of a book.

I recently read Julia Boyd's Travellers in the Third Reich which gave outsider impressions of pre war Germany which was good but this one was in another league.

Focusing on the tiny village of Obersdorf in Bavaria near the Austrian border the reader gets to know many of its citizens and their family's as the Nazi Party gains influence in the Weimar Republic and then takes over having been voted into power. In the village there are die hard early supporters of the Nazis, a small Jewish community living in fear and many folk who are persuaded by Hitler's early successes to go along with the Nazi project.

Many of the children are shown to have been indoctrinated into total belief and a lots of Obersdorf residents are killed during WW2 fighting with the Mountain Division or in the death camps.

The book finishes with the collapse of the Third Reich in 1945 and Allied occupation along with the De-Nazification tribunals that very imperfectly attempted to punish the guilty.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Cav.
907 reviews205 followers
November 6, 2025
"Hitler’s consolidation of power following the 5 March election was to have consequences that would change the world forever..."

A Village in the Third Reich was an informative book, but the tone left a bit to be desired. More below.

Author Julia Boyd is an English writer. Her books include this one, A Dance with the Dragon: The Vanished World of Peking's Foreign Colony; The Excellent Doctor Blackwell: The life of the first woman physician; and Hannah Riddell: An Englishwoman in Japan. As the widow of a former diplomat, she lived in Germany from 1977 to 1981. She now lives in London.

Julia Boyd:
Julia-Boyt-Neil-Spence-Photography-Lower-Res

The book opens with a decent intro, but I felt this was the high-water mark of the writing, sadly. From there, it meandered along for another ~12 or so hours. This is my second from the author, after her 2017 book Travellers in the Third Reich.

When I went back to that review, I saw I was complaining about the somewhat dry tone of that book, too. Sadly, this book is more of the same. I am super picky about how readable my books are, and this one missed the mark for me towards that end. The book is also too long. If you're going to write a book that almost 13 hours long, you had better make it interesting. Say whatever you want, but please don't bore me.

The author drops the quote at the start of this review early on, and it continues:
"...The death and destruction, the misery, torment and horror endured by so many millions of people during the twelve years of the Third Reich were on such a vast scale that it is impossible to absorb fully the extent of global suffering. This book tells that story from the perspective of one village in southern Germany."

The narrative here follows the citizens of the small town of Oberstdorf during the rise of the Third Reich against the backdrop of the broader story of Hitler's ascension. She writes:
"The village has always cared deeply about its history and as a result possesses a particularly well-maintained archive. It contains a wealth of detail on almost every feature of village life under the Nazis – data that in the post-war longing to forget everything to do with the Third Reich might so easily have been ‘lost’ or abandoned.
Other important sources include local newspapers, unpublished memoirs and interviews given by the villagers themselves. This book has also been enriched with diaries and letters from private collections and documents preserved in various national, state and church archives. Drawing on all these sources, it has been possible to create a remarkably intimate portrait of Oberstdorf during the momentous period between the end of the First World War in 1918 and the granting of full sovereign rights to the Federal Republic of Germany in 1955.
Of course, Oberstdorf’s experience of the Third Reich was not replicated all over Germany; each town or village’s response was unique. But by closely following these people as they coped with the day-today challenges of life under the Nazis, there emerges a real sense of how ordinary Germans supported, adapted to and survived a regime that, after promising them so much, in the end delivered only anguish and devastation."

On the positive side, there was some interesting writing at the end about the German "Denazification" efforts post-war.

********************

I was not a fan of the dry style here. The book was also too long. I wouldn't recommend it.
2,5 stars, rounded up to 3 for the writing about Denazification at the end.
Profile Image for David.
180 reviews9 followers
August 22, 2024
This is a really interesting study of life in the village of Oberstdorf in southern Germany between the years 1915 - 1945 and focuses on the upheavals of seismic events on the locals, from The Great War to Germany's catastrophic defeat in 1945. These events include the impacts of Hyperinflation, the Depression and Nazification/deNazification.
Though the retelling of the bigger picture seems rather simplistic to this retired teacher of modern History, it's the smaller stories which are the most fascinating, from the unusually sympathetic Nazi mayor and his regional superior to the resistance group set up in early 1945 to protect the village from possible vengeful allied retaliation. These tales of the best and worst of humanity - and the vast majority residing somewhere in between - are what really make the book work.
A fascinating read!
Profile Image for CS.
208 reviews22 followers
dnf
November 13, 2024
DNF @ 14% (page 62)

I really wanted to enjoy this, but it was very slow and heavy. Perhaps just not something suitable for my current reading mood.
Profile Image for Karen.
778 reviews
March 30, 2023
An interesting examination of Nazism through a detailed examination of one Bavarian village - Obersdorf.
Profile Image for Dropbear123.
391 reviews18 followers
April 22, 2023
4/5 I'd say it is definitely worth reading if interested in Nazi Germany.

About the village of Oberstdorf in southern Bavaria (which the author chose due to there being a lot of sources available). Plenty of context with a decent amount on the Weimar period and the lead up to the Nazis taking over. A mix of chronological chapters following the progress of WWII and how that affected the village as well as more specific chapters using the story of the village's inhabitants to show the bigger things happening in Nazi Germany. For example a story of a blind man who was murdered in Aktion T4 to show how that process worked across Germany (one of the darker chapters but probably the best one for the information given) or attacks by local Nazi officials on the various Catholic organisations in the area like the nuns. The military chapters tend to follow the stories of the men who went off to fight mainly with the 98th and 99th regiments of the 1st Mountain Division in France, the Soviet Union and the Balkans as well as the atrocities they saw and sometimes were involved in.

Flaws - Personally I found the 1933-1939 bits to be a bit boring as there is a chapter specifically about the infighting and power struggles between the Nazi 'old guard' and the new members who signed up after the Nazis started to do well, but it is just a village and the stakes are rather low it wasn't that interesting personally. Additionally but no fault of the authors the village chosen had a relatively moderate mayor, who despite being a Nazi was willing to cover up for Jews and wouldn't report private criticism of Hitler, wasn't really bombed during the war, and was occupied by the French and later Americans (rather than the Soviets) without a fight (due to a local coup imprisoning all the local important Nazis then surrending to the approaching French). Basically what I'm trying to get at is while the book is good at depicting what life under Nazi rule was like the area had it relatively ok compared to a lot of other areas across Germany during Nazi rule and at the end of the war and the experience of this village might not be representative of most places in this period.
Profile Image for Coomba.
8 reviews1 follower
March 24, 2023
An insightful and important account of one of the largest and most infamous tragedies of modern history, told through the stories of real people and shining a light on what life was like for the average person living in Germany during the Second World War. This book raises important questions surrounding morality, complicity and survival in the face of omnipresent danger and gives a voice to the lesser acknowledged victims of the Nazi regime. It also begs the question: Would people today conform to Nazi ideals under such circumstances as the subjects of this book were exposed to? For some I feel the answer is a resounding yes. Such as Ben ‘Barbarossa’ Phillips, James ‘the big Jud’ Kidd and of course Olli ‘Adolf’ Attwood. Fascists the lot of em.
Profile Image for Stephen Goldenberg.
Author 3 books52 followers
May 25, 2023
It’s not been deliberate but I seem to be constantly reading both fiction and non-fiction about the Second World War and the Holocaust. After so many books have been, and are being, written about this period, it’s amazing that there are still so many new stories to tell.
This is an excellent book with an amazing amount of primary sources and historical detail. What it does really well is go some way towards explaining why so many ordinary German citizens either actively supported the Nazis or tried to ignore what was happening and get on with their lives.
Profile Image for Erik B.K.K..
780 reviews54 followers
October 12, 2023
I expected something else entirely, more like a romanticized retelling of Oberstdorf's history and place in the Third Reich. But it was still an interesting read, although sometimes slightly repetitive.
Profile Image for Linden.
1,108 reviews18 followers
May 19, 2023
How the rise of fascism and World War II affected the citizens of the remote German mountain village of Oberstdorf.
Profile Image for Vasco Simões.
225 reviews32 followers
November 26, 2025
Ao revisitar a história de Oberstdorf, a aldeia bávara que Julia Boyd transforma num microcosmo do Terceiro Reich, senti que estava a observar em câmara lenta a forma como uma comunidade aparentemente tranquila se deixa contaminar por uma ideologia totalitária. Boyd mostra como, numa localidade onde todos se conhecem, o nazismo não chegou como uma tempestade abrupta, mas como uma infiltração gradual, quase silenciosa, que transformou vizinhos em vigilantes e cidadãos comuns em cúmplices. Ao longo das páginas, percebemos como a paisagem idílica dos Alpes se tornou o pano de fundo para escolhas morais que marcaram vidas para sempre.

Entre as figuras que emergem deste retrato, algumas tornam-se impossíveis de esquecer. Há Ludwig Fink, o entusiasta local do Partido que viu no nazismo uma oportunidade de ascensão social; os irmãos Schöll, cuja oposição ao regime acabou por lhes custar tudo; a família Jost, que viveu numa tensão constante entre convicções pessoais e o medo de represálias; e os jovens da aldeia que, seduzidos pela propaganda, cresceram moldados por uma educação que glorificava o sacrifício e a obediência cega. A forma como Boyd descreve deportações silenciosas, denúncias internas, prisões arbitrárias e a presença constante da Gestapo revela, sem sensacionalismo, o impacto real e devastador do regime sobre pessoas comuns.

No final, o que fica deste livro é uma reflexão inquietante: Oberstdorf não foi exceção, foi espelho. Uma aldeia que podia ser qualquer outra, onde a normalidade conviveu lado a lado com atrocidades e onde muitos preferiram não ver até ser tarde demais. Ao acompanhar estas histórias, percebemos que o perigo não está apenas nos grandes ditadores, mas na soma de pequenas cedências individuais que, juntas, abrem caminho ao horror. É um livro que nos obriga a encarar o passado e a perguntar até que ponto uma comunidade, ou cada um de nós, resiste ou se adapta quando a moralidade começa a ruir.
Profile Image for Steve.
899 reviews275 followers
January 18, 2025
Granular study of a Oberstdorf, a beautiful post-card of an Alpine town in southern Germany (population 4,000). The book chronicles the Nazification of the town, via the lives of several town members and familiers. The town itself is hardly a typical German one. On top that, it was largely Catholic, so there was in-built distrust of the Nazis. That said, with the Nazi rise to power, which was also enabled by a majority vote in Oberstdorf. The support for the Nazis was, even then, shallow, but reflective of the unease throughout Germany due to the Stock Market crash, and the devastating effects of hyper-inflation. Once Hitler was in power, he was granted sweeping powers in the 1933 Enabling Act. But, as Julia Boyd points out, it was the 1933 Equalization Act that reached down in to daily lives of Germans, transforming everything that was familiar. Nazification at the grass-roots level, which required every domestic organization, however small, to re-organize as Nazi groups. If one wonders at the speed of Nazification, this particular act is Exhibit A. The fact that the town is not a typical German town probably allowed the author to view town's history through a clearer lens. Whatever the case, it works. I enjoyed Boyd's previous book, Travelers in the Third Reich, but this effort is, to my mind, a superior accomplishment with something more important to teach.
Profile Image for evie sellers.
367 reviews3 followers
May 18, 2025
this may very well be one of the best books i have ever read, fiction or nonfiction.

it's so difficult to describe what this book does and the many emotions involved in reading it. as spoken to by the author in the book's end notes, the book aims not to mollify the perception of the very real and unspeakably awful horrors committed under the third reich, but paints an emotional, harrowing picture of what this period in time was like from a human perspective; how everyday people navigated moral shades of grey to survive in such a horrific time.

reading this book now made it especially poignant, particularly in the early chapters describing the conditions of and techniques used within the rise of the nazi party and the capitulation of the german people to fascism and a willingness to point the blame for their country's problems at their most vulnerable. there is truly so much in the rise of the party and their rhetoric that mirrors the modern us republican party, and current us systems and policies. it's nauseating to read and illustrates the need for resistance, reminding us that we know all too well what the consequences can be.

there is so much i can say about this book, but tldr it was absolutely harrowing and incredible. this should be required reading.
Profile Image for Andrés CM .
149 reviews14 followers
November 13, 2025
"Si en su anterior trabajo, Boyd narraba las experiencias de los visitantes internacionales a Alemania en la década de 1930, ahora, en cambio, se centra principalmente en las experiencias de los propios alemanes, sobre todo de los habitantes de Oberstdorf. Boyd logra humanizar un sombrío período histórico, recordándonos que el totalitarismo no surge de la nada, sino que se normaliza gradualmente en el tejido social".
RESEÑA COMPLETA: https://atrapadaenunashojasdepapel.bl...
44 reviews1 follower
September 7, 2024
Još jedna knjiga o 2. Svjetskom ratu koju sam pročitao, ali sigurno nije zadnja, čak što više nadam se da ću ih sve više čitati.

Zanimljivo je vidjeti kako su obični ljudi živili u razdoblju strahovlade Hitlera. Većinom se u knjigam o 2. Svjetsko ratu priča o političarima i vojskama a rijetko kad o običnim ljudima. Iako volio bi da je bilo više priča o pojedincima i njihovim sudbinama.
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