Book description
Not since the end of the Roman Empire, almost fifteen hundred years
earlier, is there a parallel, in Europe at least, to the fall of the
German nation in 1945. Industrious and inventive, home over centuries
to a disproportionate number of western civilization's greatest
thinkers, writers, scientists and musicians, Germany had entered the
twentieth century united, prosperous, and strong, admired by almost
all humanity for its remarkable achievements. During the 1930s,
embittered by one lost war and then scarred by mass unemployment,
Germany embraced the dark cult of National Socialism. Within less than
a generation, its great cities lay in ruins and its shattered
industries and its cultural heritage seemed utterly beyond saving. The
Germans themselves had come to be regarded as evil monsters. After six
years of warfare how were the exhausted victors to handle the end of a
horror that to most people seemed without precedent?
In Exorcising Hitler, Frederick Taylor tells the story of
Germany's year zero and what came after. As he describes the final
Allied campaign, the hunting down of the Nazi resistance, the vast
displacement of peoples in central and eastern Europe, the attitudes
of the conquerors, the competition between Soviet Russia and the West,
the hunger and near starvation of a once proud people, the initially
naive attempt at expunging Nazism from all aspects of German life and
the later more pragmatic approach, we begin to understand that despite
almost total destruction, a combination of conservatism, enterprise
and pragmatism in relation to former Nazis enabled the economic
miracle of the 1950s. And we see how it was only when the '60s
generation (the children of the Nazi era) began to question their
parents with increasing violence that Germany began to awake from its
sleep cure'.
 [The Berlin Wall] combines serious historical research with an
assured, gripping narrative ... Taylor's extraordinary narrative skill -
with the pacing of a thriller and the immediacy of reportage - is at its
best' Frederick Taylor was educated at Aylesbury Grammar School, and
read History and Modern Languages at Oxford, and did postgraduate work
at Sussex University. He is the author of the acclaimed bestsellers,
Dresden
and
The Berlin Wall
. He edited and translated
The Goebbels Diaries.
He lives in Cornwall.