Publishers Weekly
09/14/2020
Historian Wyllie (coauthor, Codebreakers) delivers a chilling and richly detailed group portrait of the women who married Third Reich leaders Martin Bormann, Joseph Goebbels, Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Reinhard Heydrich, and Heinrich Himmler. In 1920, Ilse Pröhl met decorated WWI veteran Hess at a student hostel near Munich, where their “platonic affair” became an “unbreakable bond” rooted in mutual admiration for Hitler. Gerda Buch was raised by “a rabidly Nazi father” before marrying Bormann, while Goering’s first wife, Swedish countess Carin von Foch, considered Hitler a “mythical superhero from a Norse legend.” Though the virtues of motherhood and family life were lauded by the women and the Nazi regime, Wyllie details plenty of internecine rivalries and scandals. Bormann, who “possessed a relentless and unrestrained libido,” put Ilse Hess under surveillance after her husband flew to Scotland to try to negotiate peace; a “wild rumor” swirled that Mussolini was the true father of Goering’s only child; and Lina Heydrich sabotaged Margaret Himmler’s tea parties. The wives who survived the war, Wyllie notes, sought to “bury the past” or salvage their husbands’ legacies by blaming others. Wyllie sets a brisk pace through colorful material drawn from primary and secondary sources, though it’s sometimes difficult to keep track of the large cast. Still, this is an evenhanded and comprehensive account of an underexamined aspect of Nazi Germany. Agent: Sonia Land, Sheil Land Assoc. (Nov.)
From the Publisher
[Wyllie] recounts their stories with a bracing combination of scholarship and an almost cinematic approach to spinning a compelling narrative.” –The Washington Post
“A chilling and richly detailed group portrait of the women who married Third Reich leaders...Wyllie sets a brisk pace through colorful material drawn from primary and secondary sources.” –Publishers Weekly
"Wyllie provides insight into the daily public and private lives of Nazi elite and Adolf Hitler’s close inner circle...Recommended for readers of popular World War II history." Library Journal
"The literary equivalent of gawking at a multi-car pile-up – from the safe distance of eight decades." Forward
“Wyllie tells the stories of the wives of Goering, Goebbels, Himmler and others…a distinctive prism through which to view the period.” —The Guardian (UK)
“Wyllie’s study of the other halves of the Third Reich is exhaustive and studded with fascinating detail.” —The Tablet (UK)
Praise for GOERING AND GOERING:
“A fascinating story of intrigue and family differences…Wyllie charts a relationship of seemingly irreconcilable extremes set against the backdrop of Nazi Germany.” —The Tribune (UK)
Praise for THE TIME TRAVELER’S HANDBOOK:
“This jocular, fact-filled volume imagines what it would be like to witness or participate in various historical events…I’ve strapped on my time-traveler goggles.” —The New York Times
Library Journal
11/01/2020
Margaret Himmler, Magda Goebbels, Gerda Bormann, Carin and Emmy Göering, Ilse Hess, and Lina Heydrich. The names, if recognized at all, are known by and through the men each married. In profiling these seven women, largely overlooked by history, British author Wyllie (Goering and Goering) provides insight into the daily public and private lives of Nazi elite and Adolf Hitler's close inner circle. Although each of the wives appears to have had some influence on the careers of her husband, for the most part, all either eagerly or reluctantly played conventional roles created for them as wives, mothers, and hostesses. Based on primary and secondary sources, including diaries, letters, and memoirs as well as unsubstantiated anecdotes, this account is more descriptive in nature than an in-depth examination into the interior motives of women married to some of the 20th century's most notorious war criminals. Considerable attention is given to Magda Goebbels, wife of Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, and her influence within Hitler's inner circle. Attention is also given to Hitler's longtime companion and eventual wife, Eva Braun. Readers are left with additional details but little empathy for those profiled. VERDICT Recommended for readers of popular World War II history.—Linda Frederiksen, formerly with Washington State Univ. Lib., Vancouver