Bormann

the man who manipulated Hitler

No cover

Jochen von Lang: Bormann (1979, Weidenfeld and Nicolson)

430 pages

English language

Published June 12, 1979 by Weidenfeld and Nicolson.

ISBN:
978-0-297-77574-4
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

No rating (0 reviews)

Jochen von Lang, a reporter and editor of the German magazine Die Stern, has produced a straightforwardly factual account of the career of Martin Bormann, the faceless bureaucrat whose inexorable rise in Nazi party ranks seemed to place him for a moment at the pinnacle of Nazi power. Despite the book's overblown title, von Lang depicts Bormann for the most part as a pedestrian, yet ruthlessly ambitious man, in the end as much manipulated as he was manipulator; Indeed, there is something pathetic about Bormann's end: having at last inherited Hitler's party rank, he found he did not have the F(infinity)hrer's power; at last the heir to the Third Reich, he found that empire reduced to a pile of rubble. Bormann's instinct for power was a fawning one, and whatever terror he visited upon his subordinates, his own authority resided completely in Hitler; and Lang's account underlines Alan Bullock's conclusion …

6 editions

Subjects

  • Bormann, Martin
  • National socialism -- Biography