ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

With heartfelt thanks to the usual suspects, and a few new ones: Louise Burke, Britt Carlson, Jane Davis, Julie Deaver, Sue Fletcher, Cathy Gleason, Jamie Hodder-Williams, Emma Longhurst, Carolyn Mays, Diana Mackay, Mark Olshaker, Tara Parsons, Carolyn Reidy, David Rosenthal, Ornella Robiatti, Marysue Rucci, Deborah Schneider, Vivienne Schuster and Brigitte Smith.

Madelyn, too, of course.

For those interested in reading more about Nazi Germany, you’ll find the following sources as interesting as I found them invaluable in my research: Louis Snyder, Encyclopedia of the Third Reich; Ron Rosenbaum, Explaining Hitler; John Toland, Adolf Hitler; Piers Brendon, The Dark Valley; Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History; Edwin Black, IBM and the Holocaust; William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich and 20th Century Journey, Volume II, The Nightmare Years; Giles Mac-Donogh, Berlin; Christopher Isherwood, The Berlin Stories; Peter Gay, Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider and My German Question; Frederick Lewis Allen, Since Yesterday; Edward Crankshaw, Gestapo: Instrument of Tyranny; David Clay Large, Berlin; Richard Bessel, Life in the Third Reich; Nora Waln, The Approaching Storm; George C. Browder, Hitler’s Enforcers; Roger Manvell, Gestapo; Richard Grunberger, The 12-Year Reich; Ian Kershaw, Hitler 1889-1936: Hubris; Joseph E. Persico, Roosevelt’s Secret War; Adam LeBor and Roger Boyes, Seduced by Hitler; Mel Gordon, Voluptuous Panic: The Erotic World of Weimar Berlin; Richard Mandell, The Nazi Olympics; Susan D. Bachrach, The Nazi Olympics; Mark R. McGee, Berlin: A Visual and Historical Documentation from 1925 to the Present; Richard Overy, Historical Atlas of the Third Reich; Neal Ascherson, Berlin: A Century of Change; Rupert Butler, An Illustrated History of the Gestapo; Alan Bullock, Hitler; A Study in Tyranny; Pierre Aycoberry, The Social History of the Third Reich, 1833-1945; Otto Friedrich, Before the Deluge.

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