Home :: Books :: Biographies & Memoirs  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs

Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Walking Away from the Third Reich: A Teenager in Hitler's Army (Memories Series)

Walking Away from the Third Reich: A Teenager in Hitler's Army (Memories Series)

List Price: $15.95
Your Price: $13.56
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Walking Away From The Third Reich
Review: "WALKING AWAY FROM THE THIRD REICH" is a deeply, honest tale of a German teenager as he develops under the stress of the 20th century's most cruel war. It is an inside story about life on the other side sprinkled by revealing dialogues of Germans and how they felt. Amazingly, after he grew to maturity and adulthood, he became an American citizen.

Reading the book, one admits "WAR IS INSANE", the message the writer wants to portray. It should be made "must-reading" in all history classes!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A look inside Nazi Germany through the eyes of its youth!
Review: An amazing book of the thoughts and actions of the youth in Nazi Germany. The author gives one a perspective not seen by the Allies. He attempts to simply the daily life of a youth growing up in Germany during World War II. It gives the student of Nazi Germany a different view of the war through the eyes of its youth. One can see what it was like to be a youth in Germany and be caught in the furor of war. Sellier gives one a vivid view of war with all its futile consequence. He brings to life the strengths and weaknesses of man in war, and the incredible courage endured by men of both sides of war.He denounces war as one not of glory and fame but of evil and terror. This book would be an excellent read to one with a sense of World War II, especially those who fought against the Axis powers. I would suggest this book to any student of World War II. It gives one an excellent view from the other side and shows one a picture of the horror and stupidity of war. A must read for all World War II historians.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Exciting and Moving Personal Story from World War II
Review: Mr. Sellier tells a very moving personal story of his experiences in the German Army during World War II. The book covers three parts of his war experience: initial officer's training after secondary school, service in an artillery unit in the Balkans, and, in the last third, a nightmare journey from Rokycany in Czechoslovakia back to army headquarters in Berchetsgaden and on to army provision headquarters in Traunstein and the end of the war. Throughout his experiences, Sellier retains his sense of humanity and concern for his fellow soldiers and for the civilians they encounter, and this comes through strongly in the book. He is a great, personable, story teller and has meticulously reconstructed his army career.

As a young man, Claus attended Castle Bieberstein, an exclusive private school, where his schoolmates included Kaiser Wilhelm's grandson and the nephew of Baron von Richthofen.Their lives in private school were far removed from the reality of the war in 1942, where their biggest worry was whether the war would last long enough for them to graduate and earn a medal. One early wake-up call occurred when the school team went to a Hitler Youth Athletic competition wearing their school uniforms, instead of their Hitler Youth uniforms. Although they won some of the events, they were disqualified, and their behavior led to an investigation of the school by the SS that nearly closed it.

Soon after, Claus and his friends were drafted, and he joined the First Mountain Division, where his three brothers and father were already serving.

His youthful arrogance and independent thinking got him into repeated trouble in officers training school and he was eventually demoted and sent to a combat artillery unit, where he served in Yugoslavia, fighting the Russians. He was 19. Claus grew up fast in combat, as he learned survival skills and became close to the men in his unit. He became a first rate artilleryman and survived many engagements, including a Russian attack in which many of his mates were killed, and he and a few other survivors walked through swamps for days to get back behind German lines.

In April 1945, Klaus and some others from his unit were sent to Artillery Officers School in Rokycany in Czechoslovakia. After only a few days, they were promoted to lieutenants, and Klaus and his friend Fritz were chosen, because they were Bavarians, for the dangerous mission of taking vital documents to Army Headquarters.They remained faithful to this mission while the structure of the German army was collapsing around them into chaos in response to the American advance. They spent a few days in American custody but managed to escape and walked home to Munich, to begin to rebuild their lives.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: realities of war
Review: Walking away from the Third Reich by Claus W Sellier, is a compelling story of a young German Soldier caught up in the sobering throws of a real war!! At 17, the "glory and honor of fighting for a unified Europe seemed very exciting but reality soon set in with the horrors of true life battles. Young Sellier was forced brutally into maturity and tells his story in a honest and gripping way!! Hearing this story from someone who fought on the "other side" and is now an "American" gives the reader a whole new view on what all sides went through in this time of our history. I would HIGHLY RECOMEND this book to everyone,not only history buffs. It is a story of human interest to all!!!

I hope that Mr Sellier would consider writing about his life experiences after the "War". It would be very interesting to see how his experiences affected his later life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A look inside Nazi Germany through the eyes of its youth!
Review: Walking away from the Third Reich by Claus W Sellier, is a compelling story of a young German Soldier caught up in the sobering throws of a real war!! At 17, the "glory and honor of fighting for a unified Europe seemed very exciting but reality soon set in with the horrors of true life battles. Young Sellier was forced brutally into maturity and tells his story in a honest and gripping way!! Hearing this story from someone who fought on the "other side" and is now an "American" gives the reader a whole new view on what all sides went through in this time of our history. I would HIGHLY RECOMEND this book to everyone,not only history buffs. It is a story of human interest to all!!!

I hope that Mr Sellier would consider writing about his life experiences after the "War". It would be very interesting to see how his experiences affected his later life.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Heros on the loosing side!
Review: We all know history through the eyes of the winner but the most interesting lessons to be drawn from the past come from the study of the hidden stories and perspectives of the losers of war. "Walking Away From the Third Reich" by Claus W. Sellier is such a story, and a riveting one at that! World War II experiences as told from the perspective of a German teenager pressed into service in the last years of the war. Did you ever ask yourself how it was that Hitler could come to power and wreak such destruction on the world? What were the people of Germany thinking and why? The answers to this and other nagging questions are to be found in this thoughtful look back at the experiences of a young man raised in the propaganda of the Nazi regime and then sent forth to the brutal battles of Eastern Europe. The lessons learned by young Sellier on the battlefield are timeless essays on the insanity of war and push the reader to examine their own assumptions and values. It was a great read!


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates