• Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • default color
  • red color
JA slide show

Welcome to Authors Reviewed and More!

... your source for all things book related.  Book Reviews, Author Interviews, and an Online Book Community. 

Come join us by registering below!

Book Reviews

image

You'll find the lastest book reviews here

Author Interviews

imageYou won't believe some of the authors we have lined up here!

Set up Your Own Blog!

imageJoin us and set up your own Blog!  How cool!

Home
An Obsolete Honor PDF Print E-mail

A Story Of The German Resistance To Hitler

by Helena P. Schrader



An Obsolete Honor is a work of historical fiction that takes place in Adolf Hitler’s Germany from 1938, before the Aryan nation invaded Poland, through 1944 after the attempted assassination on Der Fuhrer at the Wolf’s Den.

Image
An Obsolete Honor
That assassination is the subject of Valkyrie, a recent movie. I saw the movie, but this book is far better. The author of Obsolete Honor is a career Foreign Service Officer who lived and worked in Berlin for two decades, conducting interviews with over 100 survivors of Nazi Germany. Among her interviewees was Nina Stauffenberg, widow of Claus Graf Schenk von Stauffenberg, the German colonel who attempted to assassinate Hitler. As a result of her research, An Obsolete Honor is richly detailed and very well written. This was the second novel that I have read that devoted considerable effort to civilian life in Germany during World War II. The first was Chris Bohjalian’s Skeleton’s at the Feast, a more romantic tale based on a German woman’s personal diary. If you prefer romance to historical detail and politics, read Bohjalian’s book. I have, and it’s very good.

An Obsolete Honor is a family saga of two brothers and a sister who are placed into the real life living history of Germany and its relations with allies and enemies. The main character, Philip Baron von Feldberg is a commissioned army officer, a lieutenant colonel who rises to a position on the General Staff in Berlin, and aligns himself with peers and superiors who are distressed with Hitler’s military strategies and policies. He also owns an apartment building that has rented to Jews, a dissident and a Gestapo (secret police) investigator. These tenants become prominent in the story. Philip’s brother Christian is one of the Luftwaffe’s best pilots while his sister Theresa is married to a self-made businessman who attempts to enhance his fortune in Nazi-occupied Warsaw, Poland.

The most interesting aspects of Obsolete Honor were the funnels of communications between the Nazi leadership, the ranks within the military branches, and the German civilian population.

 

Through this story, for example, I learned how Der Fuhrer’s propaganda ministry misled the German people about the progress, or lack thereof, in the war effort, as well as the treatment of “non-Aryan” peoples, including Eastern European Jews. (Full disclosure: My mother immigrated from German-occupied Austria in 1940 before the United States entered World War II. After reading this story I could not begin to appreciate how her family, a Jewish family was able to leave the country)  In this story, you see several examples of the denials and lies that were spread about the concentration camps; civilians only knew of them as “resettlement areas” for the Jews.

I also learned that the local Nazi “civic leaders” were no less ruthless than the opportunists in Hitler’s cabinet, and no less creative with language. For example, the use of the word “socialist” in the name of the party—Nazi stood for National Socialist German Worker’s Party—was meant to attract support from the working class, but not to symbolize a desire for economic equality. Through this story, I came to appreciate how difficult civilian resistance could be under a charismatic but maniacal leader such as Hitler. For that alone the reading was worthwhile.

 

ontact Stuart Nachbar at http://www.EducatedQuest.com , a blog on education politics, policy and technology or read about his first book, The Sex Ed Chronicle, a novel on education and politics in 1980 New Jersey, at http://www.SexEdChronicles.com .


 
Tag it:
Blinkbits
BlinkList
blogmarks
co.mments
connotea
Delicious
De.lirio.us
Digg
feedmelinks
Furl it!
Hugg
Ma.gnolia
Mister.Wong
Netvouz
NewsVine
Reddit
Stumble
Technorati
 
Next >

Who's Online

We have 10 guests online

Polls

How many polls do you fill out a week?
 

Statistics

Visitors: 128732

How many Publishers are there?

6 large publishers (in New York)
3-400 medium-sized publishers
86,000 small/self-publishers

Did you know?

The first printing press was brought to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1638

Random Quotes 1.1

Food is an important part of a balanced diet.

Do you browse?

59% of the customers plan to purchase a specific book when entering a bookstore.  How about you?