Synopsis
There is nothing in recent history that
comes close to the cataclysmic events of the spring of
1945. Never before has the defeat of a nation been accompanied
by such monumental loss of life, such utter destruction.
Author Joachim Fest shows that the devastation was the
result of Hitler's determination to take the entire country
down with him; he would make sure that his enemies would
find only a wasteland, where once there was a thriving
civilization.
Fest
describes in riveting detail the final weeks of the war,
from the desperate battles that raged night and day in
the ruins of Berlin, fought by boys and old men, to the
growing paranoia that marked Hitler's mental state--his
utter disregard for the well being of both soldiers and
civilians-- to his suicide and the efforts of his loyal
aides to destroy his body before the advancing Russian
armies reached Berlin. Inside Hitler's Bunker combines
meticulous research with spellbinding storytelling and
sheds light on events that, for those who survived them,
were nothing less than the end of the world.