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Hitler's Second Book: The Unpublished Sequel to Mein Kampf (Paperback)
$13.36 - Save $7.30 35% off - RRP $20.66 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Hitler's Second BookUnavailable until now in an annotated and reliable English translation, a key to Hitler's thinking.
Full description- Publisher: ENIGMA BOOKS
- Published: 01 October 2006
- Format: Paperback 249 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Political Science & Theory | Fascism & Nazism | European History
- ISBN 13: 9781929631612 ISBN 10: 1929631618
- Sales rank: 61,946
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Full description for Hitler's Second Book
"Provides a valuable insight into the development of ideas that were to shape Hitler's foreign policy after 1933."--Jeremy Noakes, "The Times Literary Supplement" " " "The text bears all of Hitler's hallmarks, along with a terrifying, sustained belief in war and violence as a means to ensure that Germany would flourish."--"Publishers Weekly" " " "He envisaged the German people becoming involved in a series of wars for Lebens-raum culminating in an epic battle against America."--Michael Smith, " Daily Telegraph" " " "The "Second Book" is in many ways more important than "Mein Kampf.""--"Guardian" " " "I have never known anyone to say this is a forged document."--Volker Berghahn, " The New York Times" " " "Hitler admires the 'young, racially select' American people and the nation's restrictive immigration policies at the time."--"The New York Times" " " "Far more than "Mein Kampf, " the "Second Book" establishes the grandiose scale of Hitler's ambitions."--Dennis Showalter, Colorado College "More clearly than ever, Hitler sketched out the worldwide struggle against the Jews which he and his party had to lead."--Richard Overy, "Guardian" "Hitler's Second Book" is the first complete and annotated edition of the manuscript Hitler dictated shortly before his rise to power four year after publishing "Mein Kampf." It contains a catalog of shocking policy statements and previously undisclosed plans of world conquest at the core of Nazi ideology that Hitler concluded were too provoca-tive for publication.

