I've been reading this book called "Hitler's Table-Talk" recently, for a research project.
Adolf Hitler wrote two books, the well known "Mein Kampf" and the less well known "Zweite Buch" ("Second Book"), which wasn't published during his lifetime. But there was also a compilation of talks, many of which were transcribed by Hitler's secretary and others, that forms the basis of "Hitler's Table-Talk" (there has been some controversy about the way the document was compiled and translated but it's generally considered to be authentic). In it, Hitler expounds on a variety of subjects...many of them are boring, long-winded monologues about niche topics that Hitler was interested in (he was a great public speaker and was really good at haranguing the masses & frothing the people up but he just never came across well on the printed page IMO)...a lot of content (from what I've read so far) about religion and foreign policy, plans related to the war etc...and of course there's some of Hitler's familiar preoccupations sprinkled in, an obsession with race, the Jews, etc.
I've been looking in it for commentary related to the early rise of the Nazi movement in Germany & Nazi economic theories (the topic I'm researching) and I've gotten a few good bits so far.
Hitler's Table Talk is the title given to a series of World War II conversations and monologues delivered by Adolf Hitler, which were transcribed from 1941 to...
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