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Westerns preferred
RITCHIE
ROBERTSON
Timothy
W. Ryback
HITLER'S
PRIVATE LIBRARY
The
books that shaped his
life
278pp.
Bodley Head. £18.99
(US $25.95).
978 1
84792 072 0
We
think of Hitler as ranting
rather than reading. But August Kubizek and Rudolf Hausler, who shared
lodgings
with him in pre-war Vienna and post-war
Munich,
recall him as
immersed in books. A surviving list of books Hitler borrowed from the
National
Socialist Institute in Munich
between 1919 and 1921 includes not only anti-Semitic diatribes but
serious
works from Montesquieu and Rousseau to Ranke and Spengler. Hitler's own
books
are briefly described by the American journalist Frederrick Oechsner,
who, in
an account reprinted here as an appendix, estimated that at
Berchtessgaden and Berlin
he had some
16,300 books.
These
collections were soon
dispersed.
American
soldiers in Bavaria
carried off
Hitler's books piecemeal as trophies. In Berlin,
Soviet forces did their share of plundering. Eighty remaining books
were given
to the American diplomat Albert Aronson by his Soviet hosts. The only
substantial collection to remain intact was the 3,000 books stored in
an Alpine
salt mine, of which 1,200 are now in the Library of Congress. Aronson's
hoard
was donated by his nephew to Brown University.
Individual
volumes still occasionally emerge.
It
therefore cost Timothy W.
Ryback some leg work to examine a large number of books known to have
been
Hitler's and to reconstruct their place in his life. The task presented
many
difficulties. The surviving fraction of Hitler's library is
unrepresentative.
Most of the 7,000 works on military history mentioned by Oechsner have
gone,
and so have the 1,000 volumes on health and nutrition, many of which
Hitler
annotated. A large proportion of the remainder are presentation copies
which
Hitler almost certainly never read.
Enough
survives to tell us a
good deal about Hitler's mental world, though the reader of this book
must not
expect too much. Some readers' marginalia record their argument with
the text, like
those in Thomas Mann's personal library (now in Zurich). Not Hitler's: in the books
examined
by Ryback, his marginalia consist of lines, thick or thin, single or
double,
drawn in the margin, occasionally accompanied by exclamation marks. In Mein Kampf, Hitler recommends a highly
focused method of reading, in which you first decide what you want to
know,
then collect building blocks which will confirm or correct your
opinions. In
keeping with this "Boy's Bumper Book of Facts"
approach to reading, he was always consulting encyclopedias. So his
marginalia
are not very revealing. Perhaps the health books would have offered,
some
insights into vegetarianism - though, the marginal comment quoted by
Oechsner,
"Cows were meant to give milk, oxen to draw loads", hardly whets the
appetite.
Hitler's
library is most
remarkable for what it didn't contain. Schopenhauer and Nietzsche are
absent,
confirming the suspicion that Hitler knew them only at second hand.
There is a
handsome edition of Fichte, given by Leni Riefenstahl to placate Hitler
after a
disastrous encounter, but the annotations are by someone else. What
Hitler did
read, as Ryback demonstrates, were the right-wing and racist books
regularly
presented to him by their pro-Nazi publisher J. F. Lehmann. Paul de
Lagarde's
anti-Semitic German Essays have been
thoroughly annotated, and Hans F. K. Gunther's Racial
Typology of the German
People, a key work of racial pseudo-science, is almost falling
apart from
frequent use.
The
other striking absence is
literature. According to Oechsner, Hitler owned all the Wild West
adventure
stories by Karl May, all the detective fiction of Edgar Wallace, and
many love
stories by Hedwig Courths-Mahler (a German Barbara Cartland), but
nothing that
could send the imagination along unfamiliar tracks. Hitler's mental
world seems
to have had no place for imagination. Instead, he relied on a naive
conception
of science, on which he claimed that National Socialism was based.
Each of
Ryback's chapters
discusses a particular book that played an identifiable part in
Hitler's life.
During a quiet period on the Western Front, Hitler bought in the French
town of
Fournes a copy of Max
Osborn's architectural
guide to Berlin,
which survives, fragile and mud-stained, in the Library of Congress. To
his
account of this book Ryback attaches an evocation of the front line,
about
which Osborn, by a convenient coincidence, wrote a series of
journalistic
reports. In the next chapter, we hear about the adaptation of Ibsen's Peer Gynt made by Hitler's mentor
Dietrich Eckart and given to Hitler with an inscription. What Hitler
thought of
Peer Gynt we do not know, though
Ryback thinks it must have appealed to the devotee of adventure
fiction, but it
serves as a peg on which to hang an account of the early days of the
National
Socialist German Workers' Party. In the last chapter, Hitler's downfall
is
associated with a book - Carlyle's History
of Frederick the Great - which Goebbels gave him on March 11, 1945,
and
which encouraged Hitler to hope for a last-minute deliverance.
Though
these links between
Hitler's books and his life are sometimes neat, at other times they can
feel
arbitrary. Little can be said about Hitler's response to most of the
books
discussed. To explain their place in his life, Ryback has to take us on
some
long detours through relatively familiar historical territory. Still,
much here
is rewarding, notably the chapter documenting Hitler's enthusiasm for
the
Swedish explorer and pro-Nazi Sven Hedin.
Though
carefully researched,
the book is carelessly written: Ryback writes "calumnious" for
"calamitous", "concordance" for "concordat",
talks of a "typewritten manuscript", calls the Austrian Chancellor
Kurt Schuschnigg "Schussnig", and translates a parody of Hitler's
autobiography, Sein Kramp, as
"It is Cramp" (instead of "His Cramp"). Somebody should
have noticed the slips by which the putschist Wolfgang Kapp becomes
"Alfred Kapp", Fichte a "late nineteenth-century
philosopher", and Frederick
the Great writes a letter in 1862. Hitler at least knew the value of
encyclopedias.
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