Can anyone recommend a couple good WWII books to me? Preferably either what life was like in chaotic Germany or in the pov of a Nazi. or any other good ones.
goodbye to berlin
wien, wien
also >>>/pol/
>>7367975
Mein Kampf
Go to the Holocaust Museum
>>7368088
I did you stormfag.
Philosophical books, okay.
Religious books, okay.
Political stays in /pol/.
3...2...1
so many butthurt marxists in this thread
>>7367975
Jeder stirbt für sich allein - Hans Fallada
Der Nazi und der Friseur
>>7367975
infinity chan has some good /natsoc/ stuff
google censors their url now though so you are going to want to use a different search engine
>>7367975
nor really ww2 but The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century by Houston Chamberlain is a good one if you are into philosophically fascist literature
>>7368277
>No Speer
Trash.
>>7367975
Väinö Linna's The Unknown Soldier. New English translation came out just this year. Its also kinda unofficial national novel in Finland.
>>7368347
The Unknown Soldier (Tuntematon sotilas) is author Väinö Linna's first major novel and his other major work besides Under the North Star. Published in 1954, it is a story about the Continuation War between Finland and the Soviet Union as told from the viewpoint of ordinary Finnish soldiers. Gritty and realistic, it was partly intended to shatter the myth of the noble, obedient Finnish soldier. In Linna's own words, he wished to give the Finnish soldier a brain, an organ lacking in earlier depictions — this was a barb directed at Johan Runeberg's The Tales of Ensign Stål, which admiringly portrays Finnish soldiers with big hearts and little independent intellect. The novel is based on Linna's own experiences, but is more or less fictional. In its structure and style, it may be compared to the war novels of James Jones.
Penguin Books published a new English translation of the book in 2015 with the title Unknown Soldiers.[1]
>>7367975
Tigers in the Mud. Though not from the point of view of a Nazi.
>>7368267
It's essentially don't read things I don't like.
>>7367975
Why don't you just read about the most literary and ironic war?
William L Shirer's ''The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich'' -- he was an American journalist who worked over in Germany during the war
Albert Speer's 'Inside the Third Reich' for an account from someone within party
>>7367975
bumping because of the butthurt in this threads