Germany Books


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Germany Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Germany
Child at War: The True Story of a Young Belgian Resistance Fighter
Published in Hardcover by Mercury House (1991-05)
Author: Mark Bles
List price: $20.95
New price: $46.63
Used price: $1.60
Collectible price: $20.95

Average review score:

Gripping story of young girl in Resistance in 2WW
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
Outstanding account of how a young 13-year old Belgian girl decided to fight the German occupation of her country. She had no training, no background but committed herself to fight the evil Nazi menace in the only way she knew how, helping her brother who was an "eminence grise" of the shadowy and dangerous resistance community. These courageous acts brought arrest, torture and she was sent to Ravensbruck Concentration Camp, north of Berlin. Mark Bles has done a fantastic job of research, bringing to life this fanatastic true life account.

Best book ever
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-18
Comming from someone who has read extensively on resistance movements during WWII this is by far the best account. It is inspiring as well as informative. The text comes alive, and the reader is transported to war torn Belgium. Someday this book will be recognized by scholars as the difinitive account of the Belgian Resistance.

Germany
Christian Dior and Germany 1947-1957
Published in Hardcover by Arnoldsche Verlagsanstalt GMBH (2007-02-25)
Author: Adelheid Rasche
List price: $95.00
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Nostalgia par excellence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
Visual treat. Christian Dior legacy in all its glamour and la belle epoque. Superbe. C'est magnifique.

Simply gorgeous
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-14
This huge, high-quality softbound volume is, in brief, a most fitting tribute to the great Christian Dior on the fiftieth anniversary of his death. The book is filled with superb full-page photography, mostly in black and white, of everything Dior, from his gowns to his accessories to his atelier in Paris and his fashion shows. As the book's title implies, the focus is on Dior's connections with Germany in his great years, 1947-1957. Several of the photographs feature the immortal Berliner Marlene Dietrich in Dior creations. Altogether a wonderful book!

Germany
Christian Travelers Guide to Germany, The
Published in Paperback by Zondervan Publishing Company (2001-04-01)
Authors: Irving Hexham and Lothar Henry Kope
List price: $23.71
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Fabulous resource
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-29
I would highly recommend this series to anyone who is interested in the world around them. Irving is very knowledgeable and his insights are fascinating. You'll want to jump on a plane and visit Germany immediately!

Discover Germany
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-05
This is a really excellent book. I took it with me to Germany last summer and found that it was amazingly helpful and full of great information.

Germany
The Cicero Spy Affair: German Access to British Secrets in World War II (Perspectives on Intelligence History)
Published in Hardcover by Praeger Trade (1999-09-30)
Author: Richard Wires
List price: $38.95
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Average review score:

Cicero or Maxwell Smart?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
Richar Wires does himself most admirably here,in placing 'Cicero' in a wider focus, enlarging one's knowledge of WWII espionage significantly.As much as I enjoyed "The Cicero Affair" and "Five Fingers," to be without the depth and understanding of the principals in this spy episode is like viewing the Mona Lisa only on TV. The overall effect is to add brilliant color to a prized black-and-white photo. Not only are you left with a deeper understanding of wartime espionage but a respectful regard for the diplomatic corps at that period. Who could believe that an amateur servant, with the right impulse, and appropriate acting bravadoes, could upset several continents, and get his just desserts? Or did he? This was an engrossing read, a combination treasure-hunt for clues weighed against fact that is hard to put down. 50 years later the WWII victor, USA, chooses to believe the documents presented before Congress by its internal security watchdogs. Go figure.

Lessons from Deception: The Turkish Spy Case
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-26
This is not a neutral, unbiased review. Even before finishing The Cicero Spy Affair: German Access to British Secrets in World War II, I'd bought second and third copies to forward to author and scholar par excellence Richard Wires for autographing and forwarding to relatives as gifts. How many other reviews posted on this website -- or any other, for that matter -- are based on a copy of the subject volume autographed by the author at his home? I bet very few. This review is an appreciation, really. If you like the numerous excerpts I've included below, you will have to get the book to get more, as this is only a sampling.

I met Dr. Wires at Ball State University in 1975, when I was a European history major working for him as a student assistant when he was chairman of the history department. Four years later, he supervised my senior thesis in European intellectual history on Nietzscke, Malraux and Jaspers. Over the last twenty years, we've stayed in touch though postcards during travels, home visits, phone calls and letters. He is a quintessential intellectual whose history of the most remarkable spy episode during WW II, if not ever, warrants only one - and even that is tongue-in-cheek - criticism: stylistic inconsistency. Specifically, the book is only elegantly written where it is not eloquent. A typical passages of the latter characteristic are:

"In the extensive literature about espionage affairs and intelligence activities during World War II the episode known as Operation "Cicero" has gained prominence and popularity, because of its remarkable character and ironies. For more than four months during the winter of 1943-1944 the valet of Britain's ambassador in neutral Turkey photographed secret papers that his employer failed to safeguard properly; by selling his undeveloped films to a representative of German intelligence in Ankara for a reported total of $1.2 million the servant became history's then most highly paid spy. The access to one of its opponents' most important embassies marked Germany's outstanding achievement in an otherwise poor record of secret service work. But little came of the success. Many of the documents were extremely valuable, but the dictatorship never used the information effectively; the enterprising spy escaped being caught but soon discovered that his money was mostly counterfeit."

The prominence and popularity of the literature about Elyesa Bagna, a Turkish kavass, or valet, who brazenly photographed secret papers of Britain's ambassador to neutral Turkey and sold the rolls of film to a handler at the German embassy for $1.2 million in what mostly turned out to be bogus pounds during the height of WW II is extraordinary and "has become a staple of intelligence lore." Fortunately, the Germans made little effective use of their intelligence lodestar, owing to the intrinsic rivalries, conflicts and jealousies of Nazi totalitarianism, a maze of party, military and career figures, including ambassador and one-time Weimar chancellor Franz von Papen, one of the nearly-purged non-Nazis outmaneuvered at the onset of Hitler's takeover of Germany's interwar democratic attempt in 1933. Cicero even inspired a 1952 movie, Five Fingers, portrayed as a documentary that falsely shows German knowledge of D-Day (in truth, the Germans only learned the word "Overlord," meaning little more than a second Allied front against some target in the northwest part of so-called "Fortress Europe," i.e., the German occupied nations of the continent).

The legacy of the affair is in the lessons learned and the embarrassment of the British reluctantly coming to terms with the scope of the compromises even today, as demonstrated by the sluggish sales of The Cicero Spy Affair in the U.K. In the U.S., however, some stores have sold out their initial stock and each speaking engagement by the author generates further opportunities for spoken history telling, one of the highest praises a historian can receive.

Nearly twenty five years ago, a college history professor sitting next to me at a formal lecture by Dr. Wires said he was the only person he'd ever met who could write a speech, read it verbatim as an oration, and hold the audience's rapt attention as he infused us with knowledge, insight and expansion of whatever we knew, or thought we knew, to newer, higher levels. This reader genuinely "heard" the author on every page of The Cicero Spy Affair.

Writing accurate history requires meeting an exacting standard; Dr. Wires has exceeded it, though. Chief Justice Rehnquist demonstrated the difficulties in meeting this standard when he recently said that, if you think you know a subject, write a book on it and read the reviews. The Chief Justice's referenced book mentioned the dates of admission to the union of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, all wrong! He also referenced a Confederate who kept fighting after Appomattox who, in truth, fell at Shiloh three years earlier. The comment by the Chief Justice, who is certainly not mistake-prone but, rather, is blessed with a wry, dry sense of humor, illustrates the demanding standard of the historian's blend of craft, science and art. Even the most accomplished researcher can still err, but The Cicero Spy Affair appears, by all accounts, to be definitive.

Still not convinced you should read it? Your loss. Say you're not a twentieth century history, military intelligence specialist, read it anyway. Read it for its comprehensive research, documentation, analysis and explanations, and accompanying insightful photographs. Its passages on the vacillations and evasions of Europe's key neutral country, in light of Allied, Nazi and Soviet influences, the (thankfully) inefficient competitiveness of the German intelligence offices and the ineptitude of British security as a result of sleeping pills, piano playing and extremely careless handling of very secret writings all will amaze, enrich, entertain and astonish you. Read it.

Germany
Clara Schumann: Piano Virtuoso
Published in Paperback by Clarion Books (2005-06-27)
Author: Susanna Reich
List price: $9.95
New price: $1.99
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Average review score:

Virtuoso of the 19th Century
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-24
(...) That reason is because this book provides all the necessary information needed to fill your brain with a river of knowledge about this musical genius. A few templates of information I had read from the book were:
* At age 5, Clara Schumann (her name was Clara Wieck, up until she married) had amazing talent for the average child in the world at the time. As it says, as soon as she layed her fingers on the keys of the piano for the first time, she already yielded her amazing skill at music.
* Amazing for a child in her pre-teens, her first concert was conducted at age 12, at the Gewandhaus Theatre in her birthplace and what was one of her many hometowns of Leipzig, Saxony, in Germany. One of the many guests she played for were the King and Queen of Prussia.
* Not suprising for a 16-year-old, she fell deeply in love with Robert Schumann, which, like all superstars, affected her music by how emotional her music sounded to her audience, although this aspect did not affect the quality of her music, as her emotions leaked into her music and it either told her audience whether she felt gloomy or joyful. A way it affected her personal life was by angering her father, Frederick Wieck, because he did not want anything to do with Robert Schumann. He threatened Clara that if she didn't break up with Robert, he would launch her career into mass jeopardy. So that didn't stop her from communicating with Robert. She wrote letters secretly to Robert, and all the letters she wrote to Robert up unto his death in the 1850s would fill several bookshelves.
* She had seven children total, of which a few suffered terrible fates. Her son Ferdinand served in the military and he died of morphine addiction.
* Some of her friends were Felix Mendelsohnn and Johannes Brahms.

In my opinion, I feel the author of this book, Sussana Reich, should be renowned the world over because of all the thought, effort, and precision she put into this biographical journey. She gives you every little detail you need to know about this genius. While some biographies just have the basic texts of a book, she included a timeline which I found especially helpful when I was writing a biographical report about her. This author is truely an individual who stands out from the rest of the crowd. In fact she has "convinced" me so much about her that I feel she will convince you the same way!


A Heroine for All Ages!
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-27
Clara Schumann (nee Wieck) lived a heroic life that would inspire anyone in any age. She lived a life of amazing contrasts: unable to speak with other people when she was young; a piano virtuoso at age 6; the student of a domineering father; the oldest child in a broken home at a young age; the major source of income for her family all her life; a young woman who had to defy her father to marry the man of her dreams; mother of 8 children; young widow; wife of one of the world's most famous composers; constantly on tour while raising her children; friend of the most prodigious muscial talents of her day; and the dominant piano performer of her time.

This book is written at a level that will appeal to all but the most serious musical fans and students. The book is full of interesting illustrations and exhibits. I enjoyed the discussion of the sources in the back of the book. The author's mother has also written about Clara Schumann, so they were able to share data. Ms. Schumann's diary was started by her father, so it contains information from both of them. She also loved to write to her friends, and spent several hours a day doing that. As a result, there are a lot of quotes in her own words.

Amazingly modern, yet little known to many modern people, Clara Schumann faced many of the conflicts and contradictions that today's young women and mothers face. Her brave and extraordinary life can provide inspiration and guidance for today . . . and tomorrow.

I especially encourage you to share this book with young people who have extraordinary talent or a calling at a young age, to help them understand what some of the issues are that they will face over the rest of their lives.

Overcome your misconceptions about what it means to be a career woman in the 21st century by examining one from the 19th century!

Germany
The Combat History of schwere Panzer-Abteilung 507, In Action in the East and West with the Tiger I and Tiger II
Published in Hardcover by J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing inc. (2003-02)
Author:
List price: $75.00
New price: $74.95
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Average review score:

Another Great Tiger History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22
At present this is one of the trio of Tiger Tank battalion books published by JJ Fedorowicz and covers the formation of the 507 Heavy Tank Battalion .
This unit which was formed relatively late in the war in October 1943 from a cadre of the 4th Panzer regiment, went on to fight on both the Eastern and Western fronts where they employed both the Tiger 1 and King Tiger.
It receieved its baptisim of fire at Tarnopol and Brody in March 1944 and was involved in heavy fighting during Operation Bagration where it gave a good account of itself.
Finally the battalion was ground down and in February 1945 after months of heavy fighting it was sent back to Germany to reconstitute and train on the King Tiger.
Partially re equipped with the tanks (only the 3rd Company was fully equipped with 15 King Tigers) the unit went straight into action from its training facility at Paderborn against elements of the US Army.
Incorporated into SS Panzer Brigade Westfalen, which was tasked with the defense of the southern flank of Paderborn,leading elements of the US 3rd Armoured division (Taskforce Welborn)were ambushed and suffered very heavy casualties while the 507 was unscathed.
After this action the 507 would never again fight as a unit and it degenerated into individual actions until its last tanks were destroyed and the unit went into American captivity before being handed over to the Soviets.
Printed on fine glossy paper for excellent photo reproduction the book is packed with first hand accounts from the units veterans, some great colour plates of the units tanks, and various oranigrams of the units makeup, there are even a number of colour photos of the units men.
Told from the members point of view (some in diary entrys) makes for fascinating reading and at a little over 220 pages is very readable.
As with any JJF offering there are ample photos of the men and machines of this unit in great detailin both full page and half page.
It also provides a brief look into the fortunes of Germany in the last days of the war where even an experienced combat unit such as the 507 could not be fully equipped with king Tigers, but had on its combat roll a number of Jagdpanthers, Hetzers, and SturmTigers
This is a great book written by the units veterans and is highly recommended.



If You're Into Tigers, You Gotta' Have This One.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-20
What's to say, it's another of the remarkable unit histories in large format in a nice binding. Don't wait to get a paperback version of this ten years from now, if they ever reprint it, or whine about having to pay $100 or more for this edition down the line. A must-have book for the Tiger tank history buff.

Germany
The Condor Legion: German Troops in the Spanish Civil War (Elite)
Published in Paperback by Osprey Publishing (2006-02-28)
Author: Carlos Jurado
List price: $17.95
New price: $6.87
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Average review score:

Needed information on Legion Condor
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
This Osprey title goes into much greater detail on German participation in Spain during the Guerra Civil. Accurate numbers on German combatants from all services are supplied. There are some details on equipment used, though some more color plates for tanks, artillery and aircraft would have been helpful. The uniform illustrations are the usual Osprey quality. This volume fills some gaps left by the other Osprey titles, the "Spanish Civil War" and "The Spanish Civil War in the Air".

the Condor Legion
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
terrific and informative. Excellent color plates. Very good reference for the historian or figure painter.

Germany
Contests for Corporate Control: Corporate Governance and Economic Performance in the United States and Germany
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (2000-04)
Author: Mary O'Sullivan
List price: $180.00
New price: $85.95
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The downside of shareholder value
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-02
Current wisdom is that shareholder value should be the guiding light for corporate management. The US is following this lodestar. US companies outperform all other so who can quarrel with this? European companies are following the US example. The author wonders if companies are digging their own graves by doing so. Her arguments may not be watertight but they make you sit up and think. She correctly states that a company's success is dependent on innovation. There is no evidence that concentrating on shareholder value is best for innovation. The blossoming of the electronics industry is not based on the free market or entrepreneurship or shareholder value. The foundation was enlightened procurement by the Department Of Defence. IBM, INTEL and DEC all owe their success to "buy only American" defence orders according to her analysis. She also shows that the stock market only plays a very small role in providing capital for investment. Most funding comes from depreciation and retained earnings. Equity issues are only important to buy out owners and to allow companies to acquire other ones. An interesting analysis shows that the benefit of an acquisition almost always accrues to the shareholders of the acquired company and almost never to the acquiring company. Institutional investors (and raiders) are the only shareholders with influence. Their only interest is share performance. They have aligned their interest with that of top management through stock options and bonus plans depending on share performance. Company managers can now become very rich when increasing the value of the shares. As the average tenure of a CEO is around five years, it leads automatically to a short-term perspective. She believes that there is more to the economic value a company can produce than shareholder value. This point is not dealt with in any detail other than the emphasis on innovation and organisational learning that are long-term processes. One interesting point is the difference between German and Japanese companies on the one hand and US on the other. US companies do not see it as an objective to upgrade the job opportunities for its employees. In the past companies offered good pay for relatively simple jobs. The company attitude is to move these jobs to low cost countries and make the employees redundant. Most of the redundant people have to take lower paid service jobs. She believes that companies can and should follow a different path and enrich the kind of work the company can offer and invest in the education of its employees. She gives no real-life examples of US companies that have successfully done so. The different path taken by German is described very lucidly. Even though German companies have made much greater effort than American companies in upgrading its workforce, they face other problems. Financing pensions is big problem, so is the restructuring of the banks. Getting the "upgraded" specialists at all levels to work as teams across specialist borders is very difficult. This book presents many thought-provoking challenges to readers that believe in shareholder value and the free market without any reservations or concerns.

The downside of shareholder value
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-02
Current wisdom is that shareholder value should be the guiding light for corporate management. The US is following this lodestar. US companies outperform all other so who can quarrel with this? European companies are following the US example. The author wonders if companies are digging their own graves by doing so. Her arguments may not be watertight but they make you sit up and think. She correctly states that a company's success is dependent on innovation. There is no evidence that concentrating on shareholder value is best for innovation. The blossoming of the electronics industry is not based on the free market or entrepreneurship or shareholder value. The foundation was enlightened procurement by the Department Of Defence. IBM, INTEL and DEC all owe their success to "buy only American" defence orders according to her analysis. She also shows that the stock market only plays a very small role in providing capital for investment. Most funding comes from depreciation and retained earnings. Equity issues are only important to buy out owners and to allow companies to acquire other ones. An interesting analysis shows that the benefit of an acquisition almost always accrues to the shareholders of the acquired company and almost never to the acquiring company. Institutional investors (and raiders) are the only shareholders with influence. Their only interest is share performance. They have aligned their interest with that of top management through stock options and bonus plans depending on share performance. Company managers can now become very rich when increasing the value of the shares. As the average tenure of a CEO is around five years, it leads automatically to a short-term perspective. She believes that there is more to the economic value a company can produce than shareholder value. This point is not dealt with in any detail other than the emphasis on innovation and organisational learning that are long-term processes. One interesting point is the difference between German and Japanese companies on the one hand and US on the other. US companies do not see it as an objective to upgrade the job opportunities for its employees. In the past companies offered good pay for relatively simple jobs. The company attitude is to move these jobs to low cost countries and make the employees redundant. Most of the redundant people have to take lower paid service jobs. She believes that companies can and should follow a different path and enrich the kind of work the company can offer and invest in the education of its employees. She gives no real-life examples of US companies that have successfully done so. The different path taken by German is described very lucidly. Even though German companies have made much greater effort than American companies in upgrading its workforce, they face other problems. Financing pensions is big problem, so is the restructuring of the banks. Getting the "upgraded" specialists at all levels to work as teams across specialist borders is very difficult. This book presents many thought-provoking challenges to readers that believe in shareholder value and the free market without any reservations or concerns.

Germany
Count Your Way Through Germany
Published in School & Library Binding by Tandem Library (2003-12)
Author: James Haskins
List price: $14.40
New price: $14.40

Average review score:

A wonderful book to introduce German culture!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-02
As a teacher of German in an elementary school, it is always difficult to find appropriate (if any) books to use in the classroom. Although this book is written in English, therefore technically off-limits in my German-only program, it has wonderful cultural ties that can be used at some point in my classes. The pictures, if nothing else, give a lot of information about German culture. This is also a great book for regular classroom teachers wanting to introduce a new culture to their students. What a thrill to find!

Ein schönes Büchlein ist Count Your Way Through Germany!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-05
This little book is quite unique. Although written in English, it presents some interesting snippets of German culture. I love the cover: a picture of Der Rattenfänger von Hameln (The Pied Piper of Hamlin). I have my own language school, and hold a Master's degree and PA Teaching Certification in German. This will be a great text for me to use to introduce German culture to children OR adults. Gott sei dank, the author does not depend on stereotypical examples, such as the Alps, Lederhosen, Wurst, Bier, to present the numbers from 1-10. Whether he is well acquainted with Germany's culture and history through his own study of German, or not, the author, nevertheless, reflects his wish to provide accurate information. I offer kudos to him for his attention to correct English grammar as well. I can't wait until Count Your Way Through Germany 1-20 comes out!

Germany
Courageous Hearts: The Women of July 1944
Published in Paperback by Berghahn Books (1997-05)
Author: Dorothee Von Meding
List price: $19.95
New price: $121.41
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Average review score:

the last anti Nazi resistance within germany:
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-09
Dorthea Meding's recent translation is timely and of interest to both historians of this important subject, the resistance, or Widerstand, within Germany itself to the course of the war, and its effects upon Germans then, and in the future. It is a remarkeable achievement in addition of skillful interviewing with the almost all of the surviving spouses of the key players in the 1944 plot to not only end HItler's lilfe, but to rescue the country from the brutal bombing, and mass expulsions taking place in the East at this time. It is humorously recounted, often (in the case of Dietrich Bonheffer's widow), always involved in the person of these women their constant concern for their children, their roles, and their views of the importance of the conspiracy later for Germany, and for what would came after the ashes of 1945. The women interviewed are extremely individualistic, and spirited, although many of them are close now to their eighties, or older. this reviewer regards the book as an important contribution to womens' literature, as well as to the literature of the resistance of this time.

Hitler and the German women's courage
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-15
What you ever wanted to know about the wifes whose men died fighting against Hitler in the underground during the Third Reich. Very intimate, touching and informing.


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