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67 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating History
Linge was Hitler's personal assistant from 1939 to the end, constantly by his side during that entire time.

This book has come out after another new release, "He Was My Chief" by Christa Schroeder. This is the first English translation of this work. The original publishing was in German in 1980. "Chief" is a new book that was released after Schroeder's...
Published on August 22, 2009 by Mr. Allnut

versus
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Linge is a Hitler fan...
...to the end. Despite this, he appears to have a good memory and reports the facts of his service to the Fuhrer accurately, even if his writing is favorably colored for Hitler. Linge recounts quite a few interesting observations such as his belief that Hitler knew in advance that Rudolph Hess was flying to England. He bases his assessment on the fact that he found...
Published 16 months ago by Jane Pensive


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67 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating History, August 22, 2009
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This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
Linge was Hitler's personal assistant from 1939 to the end, constantly by his side during that entire time.

This book has come out after another new release, "He Was My Chief" by Christa Schroeder. This is the first English translation of this work. The original publishing was in German in 1980. "Chief" is a new book that was released after Schroeder's death.

The books, while definitely different in style appear to paint a similar portrait of Hitler and his inner circle.

Linge's book is a personal memoir while much of Schroeder's book is gleaned from letters written by her to a friend. Both of these authors claim no knowledge of the atrocities committed by the Nazi government and unlike Hitler's other secretary, Traudl Junge, neither demonstrate any outward remorse.

What is fascinating about both books is the intimate look into the rulers of the Third Reich. You learn not just about Hitler, but many details of his inner circle.

The Linge book gives the reader a more detailed account of Hitler's daily interactions and life while the Schroeder book seems to give more detail in the whole atmosphere surrounding Hitler and his henchman.

Both works pretty much cover the same time frame in history and have many similar accounts. The reader walks away with a completely different view of Hitler and the German people from that available in history books or popular media. The country and their leaders are portrayed as people, with human aspirations and faults, and not mystical evil monsters under a witchcraft spell.

Perhaps that is what makes both books so incredibly important. What happened in Germany can happen anywhere. A nation can easily be lulled into complacency, accepting what they are told, controlled by manipulating leaders and an oppressive government. It demonstrates the importance of staying involved, always questioning and holding our leaders responsible for their actions.

If you are interested in Hitler and wartime Germany, both are a must read.
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37 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent story from a first-hand personal perspective, September 17, 2009
By 
O.L. "reader153" (Pennsylvania, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
Excellent story from the perspective of Hitler's valet; thus much of the material does not concern grand political strategies, but quotidian details such as Hitler's daily habits and health concerns as well as the author's personal feelings about many of the people constantly around Hitler (some of whom were in working capacities similar to the author himself, such as Hitler's physician[s], but also such figures as Himmler, Goebbels, Göring, Bormann and others; in regards to the latter the author provides interesting details on many of their personalities, the rivalries between one another, and the feelings of the headquarters "underlings" such as himself [Hess was beloved, while Bormann was despised, for example]).

Those looking for a work to either demonize or exculpate Hitler will be disappointed. There are numerous details and stories which serve to humanize Hitler, however, none of them are told in such a way that could be characterized as revisionist in the negative sense. (Things such as Hitler in his nightshirt changing a lightbulb by himself in his bedroom, or his problems with flatulence during the last years of his life.) Having said that the work does serve to humanize Hitler implicitly, although personally I feel that that is long overdue (Hess and especially Goebbels are also presented in a more positive light than is usually the case, while Bormann, Göring and the entire military leadership are seen as more flawed.)

Shone new light (for me) on certain events such as Rommel's suicide (the author thinks it was ordered by Bormann because of an old grudge from the Polish campaign) and Hess's flight to Scotland (the author thinks Hitler knew about it), as well as new events (for me) such as Hitler's effort to sound out peace terms from the West in 1944/5. Also includes periodic passages about the author's years-long interrogation (including torture) at the hands of the Soviets after being captured fleeing the Führerbunker.

Includes much discussion about the political power struggles that went on around Hitler, and how these affected domestic and foreign policies--there is much here to inform histories which all too often address events without taking into account the personal turf battles that take place in every government bureaucracy, fascist or otherwise.

There are periodic notes from the translator(?) about how other personal accounts from people at Hitler's headquarters differ from those presented here, but this is to be expected on a subject this volatile, with so many people having such a vested interest in being presented a certain way (along with the passage of time, and differing perceptions, of course). Having said that I found the author to be highly credible, and while I'm sure he has his blind spots, I think his story will be a valuable addition to histories of the time.
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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What der Butler didn't miss!, December 14, 2009
By 
Devil's Advocate (Over your shoulder!) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
" I had a theatre box on history, and remained in it until it collapsed..."
Thus speaks Heinz Linge, personal valet to Hitler from 1935 until the suicide 10 years later.
For those few (post-"Downfall") who still view Hitler as some kind of supernatural ogre or maniacal beast this book will truly be a revelation.
For the rest of us, intrigued as to who this man was, this book is another fascinating fragment in a compelling mosaic.
The best way to picture Linge is outside the Fuhrer's bedroom last thing at night and first thing in the morning. Never farther than arm's length from his master for the last decade of his life.
Linge comes across as apolitical although clearly intoxicated by his attendance on this human phenomenom.
There are some absolutely priceless vignettes to savour in this honest, even-tempered and even-handed account:
From the banal; Hitler kept a chest expander under his bed, he wore large cap visors to block out light
...to the bizarre; a woman claimed Hitler raped her, Hitler admired the man who tried to assassinate him in 1939 and utlised him to design other bombs,
to the exotic; Hitler and Eva caught embracing by Linge, Hitler possibly visiting his illegitimate child and former mistress during his tour of the WW1 battlefields...etc.
And that's before you get to the pen pictures of Bormann (a brute), Goebbels (engaging and loyal), Goering (brave but absurd) and Hess (loved by all).
An absolute cracker of a book with the pleasant and unpretentious Linge slowly descending into Hell. Unmissable unless you have no interest whatsoever in History and it's human carnival of characters.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars From the man closest to Hitler, December 23, 2009
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This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
Although Linge's reminiscences cannot be taken as 100% gospel, because he occasionally gave conflicting accounts over certain events (for example, Hitler's death in the Berlin bunker and the subsequent treatment of his remains), this book is very valuable for giving the views of the man who was closer to Hitler than any other person for ten years. Although Hitler's mistress Eva Braun had a closer personal relationship, Hitler spent far more time from 1935-1945 in the company of his personal valet Heinz Linge, than he did with Eva Braun.

Instead of revelations on the "big picture" of Hitler's world-changing activities, Linge's book present the "little picture" of Hitler's day-to-day activities and foibles. For example, Linge states that "Hitler's breath was almost constantly foul." Hitler always dressed himself. In conflict with some other sources, Linge states that Hitler was not opposed to alcohol, and would have an occasional beer with a meal, as well as wine for toasts.

Linge believed that "Hitler and Eva Braun lived as man and wife," and that their sexual relations were even "especially active" on occasion. Linge thought that Hitler himself believed he may have fathered a child on a French girl while he was stationed in Belgian Flanders (northern France) in 1917. (This son, Jean-Marie Loret, claimed as an adult that he was Adolf Hitler's illegitimate child, but genetic tests could not prove this. DNA tests in 2008 apparently refute the claim.)

In conclusion, a very useful addition to studies of Hitler.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Memoir of an Bystander to Infamous History..., October 28, 2009
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This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
The book is the memoir of Hitler's SS officer valet, Heinz Linge. Linge's book is well written and easy to read.

It opens in 1933, when Linge joined the "Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler" (LSSAH was Hitler's SS bodyguard regiment). He was then selected for duty at the Reich Chancellery at the end of 1934. Once there he was selected to be a manservant (valet) to Adolf Hitler. Linge then begins setting out his ten years with Hitler that is shown through anecdotes and observations. The book is not meant to be a scholarly written resource as to those times and events. However, it is a very interesting read, because it sets forth scenes and conversations that give a more rounded picture of Hitler and his inner circle. Linge's portrait of Hitler is not the crazy, one dimensional, blood-thirsty leader that people have come to expect. As Roger Moorhouse (the author of "Killing Hitler: The Third Reich and the Plots Against the Führer") states so well in his introduction: "His portrayal is affectionate, certainly, but it is not without criticism." The author does admit to having a "blind faith" in Hitler overall. He talks about how Hitler in the 1930's "bred" great hopes with all the new construction projects and plans for Germany. He covers the time as part of the inner circle that ultimately was cut off from much of the harsh realities of the "outside world" especially after the Second World War started.

Much like "Traudl" Junge (Hitler's personal secretary and an author of her own memoir), Linge claims to have been apolitical and not aware of the horrors of the Third Reich. However, that statement is harder to swallow coming from Linge. Junge was a rather naive, young woman who saw Hitler as a fatherly figure. Hitler liked to project that image to her with trite, pleasant conversations. Here in Linge's book he gives examples of private talks and discussions that are more frank and man-to-man. As stated, Linge recounts: Hitler's daily routine, dinning habits, his private life (with Eva Braun and the inner court), his "most intense pastime" of architecture, health issues, leadership style, his opinions of others, the war and even faults. Further, the author dispels some myths as to Hitler, Speer, and others.

Some of same antecdotes recounted by Linge in this book also appear in "The Hitler Book", edited by Henrik Eberle and Matthias Uhl. Since "The Hitler Book" book was compiled mainly from the Soviet interrogations of Linge and Gunsche (Hitler's most personal aides), that book presents events from a Soviet doctrine point of view as to how the information and history should be recorded. That bias is absent in Linge's memoir. Again, the book is worth reading and most interesting as to the atmosphere before and leading up to the war.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Der Fuehrer, by one who knew him well, December 20, 2009
By 
Wayne Engle "Wayne Engle" (Madison, IN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
This new English translation of Heinz Linge's intimate portrait of his boss, Adolf Hitler, likely will annoy those who would like us always and only to think of the Nazi leader as a raving, evil, mad monster. Evil his personality certainly contained -- just like those of Josef Stalin and Mao Tse-tung. But Linge gives us, in his calm, matter-of-fact prose, the human side of Adolf Hitler as well.

Der Fuehrer treated his domestic help with kindness and paid them well, for instance. He was a man without airs, who never wore flashy military uniforms as do most dictators, and who slept on a simple soldier's camp bed, even after becoming German chancellor. He was gallant and gentlemanly toward women, and was capable of exuding irresistible Austrian charm when he chose.

He could and did rage and shout at his generals and high Nazi officials, leaving them speechless and petrified, when things did not go as he wanted. But he reserved that rage mostly for such higher-ups. The little people, the servants, the ordinary German in the street, the German soldier he visited on the Eastern Front -- these he nearly always treated with kindness and consideration. And one can find a number of quotes of Hitler's in the book condemning those who considered themselves "high and mighty," whether they be industrialists, generals or German royalty.

Linge also depicts the Hitler of an astounding memory, who was almost always two or three thoughts ahead of everyone else, and whose imagination leaped decades into the future. The autobahns, the Volkswagen, the dangers of smoking and drinking, all were concerns of his long before the U.S. built its interstate highway system, before people realized that large, gas-guzzling cars were not the only way to travel, before health-conscious people began telling us that smoking and drinking could shorten your life.

Linge shows us his former employer in the manner that a servant with a strong sense of duty might -- with understanding of him as a human being, but without completely overlooking some of the crimes against humanity he authorized. If you would like to know more about Hitler the man, instead of Hitler the "monster," this book is an excellent read.



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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars As of lately..., August 6, 2010
By 
Alfonso Llana (Colombia, SouthAmerica) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
...I have read a lot of books by people close to Hitler. Hitler to the End offers two things that many of the others do not:

-many Füerer secrets i.e. the person to person perceptions of someone REALLY close to Hitler. Herr Linge opinions are not about political or military issues, in fact Linge says in many passages of the book that he was not present during this and that meeting or conversation, but he gives us a coffee table opinion of the very human Adolf Hitler. Shocking, is not it? Yes, ladies and gentlemen, Hitler was human, very much, he was even a nice person according to the book and that precisely makes Hitler's evil behavior even the most frightening

-last but not least, Heinz Linge DOES NOT claim through pages and pages that he is full of remorse and that he loved Hitler then but now he (Linge) saw the light and rejects him. On the contrary. Linge seems to admire his Boss very much as a person, even 30 or so years after everything happened. I find that a very honest position. Hitler WAS charming and a very good boss with a simple mind as Herr Linge, why should Linge denied his admiration and appreciation?

In short, although this book is a far cry from other "profound" books about Hitler, is nonetheless very entertaining and informative.

As a book is very nice. A nice letter size, pictures, hardcover with dustjacket and a very comfortable size to hold.

Nice product.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Linge is a Hitler fan..., September 28, 2010
This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
...to the end. Despite this, he appears to have a good memory and reports the facts of his service to the Fuhrer accurately, even if his writing is favorably colored for Hitler. Linge recounts quite a few interesting observations such as his belief that Hitler knew in advance that Rudolph Hess was flying to England. He bases his assessment on the fact that he found Hitler fully dressed and waiting for him the morning after Hess landed in Scotland, which was most unusual as Hitler awoke rather late each day and waited until Linge set out his clothes after reading the newspaper and having a small breakfast. Linge also contends that Hitler and Eva Braun had a normal physical relationship, although some of Hitler's biographers are not sure that Hitler ever had a normal relationship with a woman. Linge also claims that he was the one to carry Hitler's body outside to burn it after his suicide. He says he did not hear the gunshot fired by Hitler, but unquestionaby found Hitler and the missus dead. Stalin always believed that Hitler escaped capture, and recent forensic studies of the skull thought to be Hitler's showed that it is a woman's skull, so it is interesting to know that Hitler did successfully kill himself.

Although Linge states several times that he volunteered for the Russian front because his service to the dictator was so hard on him, he really doesn't convey how working for Hitler was so difficult. He spent the war in safety, with plenty of clothes and food, unlike most Germans, let alone the rest of Europe. He also is unabashedly admiring of his boss, which leads the reader to believe that he did not really want to go the the eastern front.

If you are curious about WWII, or an intimate account of life with the Fuhrer until the bitter end, then you will find this book interesting.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very informative reading, August 2, 2010
This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
Have read several books on Hitler, including Mein Kempf. This was an inside look into behind the scenes. Something we rarely have access to. Enjoyed the book and would recommend for anyone interested in more information about history, that can be gleamed from no where else. This book gave a great insight, and easy reading, into the Hitler behind the scenes.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting Read. Last 2 Pages Missing, December 14, 2009
By 
AFN1000 (N. Hemisphere) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet (Hardcover)
Overall I found this book to be fairly interesting and there are certainly some aspects of Hitler's life that are different than most of the stories you read about him. Lots of awkward sentences probably from the translation and unfortunately my hardcover book was missing the last two pages! That was a bummer. I wonder if that has happened to others.

Overall I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the more mundane aspects of Hitler's life and to be truthful that's why I got this book. I wanted to see if I could get a glipse into his personal life and see how his closest associates interacted with him. For that reason the book is worth it.
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With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet
With Hitler to the End: The Memoir of Hitler's Valet by Heinz Linge (Hardcover - September 1, 2009)
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