Volker Ullrich is a historian and journalist whose previous books
include biographies of Bismarck and Napoleon, as well as a major
study of Imperial Germany, The Nervous Superpower, 1871-1918.
Ullrich was for many years editor of the political books review
section of Die Zeit. His two-volume biography of Adolf Hitler was a
German bestseller.
Jefferson Chase is a writer, translator and journalist based in
Berlin. He has translated more than a dozen German texts into
English, including Volker Ullrich's acclaimed two-volume biography
of Hitler.
Superb ... excellent and admirably succinct.
*The Times*
Ullrich delivers a punchy account that is a proper page-turner ...
there is still plenty to say about immediate postwar Germany.
*Financial Times*
Strongly written and deeply researched ... a vital and often
vibrant account of eight days when people all across Europe were
suspended in confusion and chaos.
*Kirkus*
The last days of the Third Reich have often been told, but seldom
with the verve, perception and elegance of Volker Ulrich's rich
narrative. For Western nations that have never faced comprehensive
and destructive defeat, this is an instructive lesson in how
societies cope with the devastating reality of a surrender that
they grimly await.
*Richard Overy*
A fast-paced, brilliant recounting of the turbulent last days of
the Third Reich. With all the energy and chaos of a Jackson Pollock
canvas, Eight Days in May evokes the complete and utter chaos of a
collapsing society.
*Helmut Walser Smith, author of Germany: A Nation in its Time*
The last chapter of the Nazi regime, just before its fall, is
perhaps the most interesting. And Volker Ulrich manages to cover
the days after Hitler's suicide with brilliant prose, and excellent
original research.
*Norman Ohler, author of Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich*
Ullrich's compact, gripping narration brings to life the death
throes of the Nazi regime as individual acts of delusion,
desperation and resignation. This vivid mosaic of German reactions
to defeat is a suspenseful account and original depiction of the
ambivalence and disbelief of those who had been spellbound by
Hitler.
*Wendy Lower, author of The Ravine*
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