Voices from the Bunker: The True Account of Hitlers Last Days by Pierre Galante


Voices from the Bunker: The True Account of Hitlers Last Days
Title : Voices from the Bunker: The True Account of Hitlers Last Days
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 190393348X
ISBN-10 : 9781903933480
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 224
Publication : First published April 1, 1989

Set against the backdrop of their own lives in 1930s Germany, Traudl Junge, Hitler's personal secretary and two other aides tell us about the final weeks, days and hours of Hitler, with the Goebbels family and their harrowing family suicide. Early in 1945, as Allied forces advanced across Germany towards Berlin, Hitler rejected his advisors' pleas for him to flee and instead withdrew into a heavily fortified bunker under the Chancellery with the select group of men and women who formed his personal retinue. What actually happened in the last days has been shrouded in mystery, and questions - not least whether Hitler actually died there - remain. This book, back in print for the first time in more than a decade, draws extensively on the original testimonials and manuscripts of Traudl Junge, Hitler's personal secretary for the entire war.


Voices from the Bunker: The True Account of Hitlers Last Days Reviews


  • Kelley

    I enjoyed this book, Voices from the Bunker, but it is not what it is billed as. It says “Hitler’s personal staff tells the story of the Fuhrer’s last days.” The vast majority of it (153 of 166 pages) is from the (then) unpublished recollections of Traudl Junge, one of Hitler’s secretaries. In context only 13 pages was given to three of Hitler’s others intimates in his final days. Junge published her own memoirs (“Hitler’s Last Secretary”) a few years later (Note: I wrote a review here of it a few years ago). While Junge is a fascinating person, she still remains an enigma as sorts. While she later realized that the Hitler she knew as a regular person, as part of his inner circle, was not the same person the world knew as the megalomaniacal leader of Nazi Germany. Yet she had a difficult time accepting any responsibly for her own (albeit small) part in supporting Hitler over a few years of service in his last years. This book’s editors claim to present this book as a multitude of insiders’ voices, but as seen above, this book is really all about Junge with a few morsels thrown in from others. True enough, Junge is fascinating. The other accounts aren’t as much so. But if you want to read about Junge, then better to read Junge’s own full account, not this version. While Junge’s account is compelling in this insider view, better to read her own full account than this edited version that was not yet published.

  • Katie

    Easy read that any history lover would enjoy but there is something that bothered me throughout the book. These seemingly normal, average young ladies were swept up in the Nazi craze. I mean seriously how could they not know about the holocaust!!

  • Jim

    It was interesting to hear from people who were close to Hitler. Apparently, some of them had no idea how much of a monster he was until after the war.