Critic Reviews
Mixed
Based on 8 reviews on
Norman Ohler is an award-winning novelist, screenwriter, and journalist. He is the author of the New York Times bestseller Blitzed, the non-fiction books Tripped about Nazi research into LSD during World War II and The Bohemians about resistance against Hitler in Berlin, as well as the novels Die Quotenmaschine (the world's first hypertext novel), Mitte, Stadt des Goldes (translated into English as Ponte City), as well as the historical crime novel Die Gleichung des Lebens. He was cowriter of the script for Wim Wenders's film Palermo Shooting. He lives in Berlin.
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@foliofed Breath by James Nestor. Blitzed by Norman Ohler. How was the raising the perfect dog book?
Artist from Yellowstone,Montana, no matter where I run poverty & illegals have destroyed lives! Awake not Woke, please end open borders , not open hearts♥
Blitzed : drugs in the Third Reich : Ohler, Norman, author : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive https://t.co/vcv9VX7P3W via @internetarchive I shared this before https://t.co/OMwsCgCgYr Reality Hitler would not allow drugs He thought PERVITIN a vitamin https://t.co/Hs2M6417e7
National Bestseller New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice "The strengths of Ohler's account lie not only in the rich array of rare documents he mines and the archival images he reproduces to accompany the text, but also in his character studies... Ohler effectively captures Hitler's pathetic dependence on his doctor and the bizarre intimacy of their bond...Blitzed makes for provocative reading." --The New York Times Book Review "A revelatory work that considers Hitler's career in a new light. 'Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich' is that rare sort of book whose remarkable insight focuses on a subject that's been overlooked, even disregarded by historians." --The San Francisco Chronicle "Blitzed is a fascinating read that provides a new facet to our understanding of the Third Reich."--Buzzfeed "It's as breezy and darkly humorous as its title. But don't be fooled by the gallows humor of chapter names like 'Sieg High' and 'High Hitler' This is a serious and original work of scholarship that dropped jaws around Europe when it was published there last year." --Mashable "A juicier story would be hard to find." --The Week "Delightfully nuts, in a Gravity's Rainbow kind of way."--The New Yorker "Transforming meticulous research into compelling prose, Ohler delves into the little-known history of drug use in Nazi Germany."--Entertainment Weekly "[A] fascinating, engrossing, often dark history of drug use in the Third Reich."--The Washington Post "This heavily researched nonfiction book by a German journalist reports that the drug was widely taken by soldiers, all the way up the ranks to Hitler himself, who received injections of a drug cocktail that also included an opioid."--Newsday "The book achieves something nearly impossible: It makes readers look at this well-trodden period in a new way and does it in a readable, inviting format. It also doesn't preclude future scholarship by professional historians to elaborate on the role of drugs in Nazi Germany." --Newsweek "This is Ohler's first nonfiction book (he's written three novels) and the first popular book of its kind, filling a gap between specialist academic literature and sensationalist TV documentaries... The book is an impressive work of scholarship, with more than two dozen pages of footnotes and the blessing of esteemed World War Two historians... Ohler offers a compelling explanation for Hitler's erratic behavior in the final years of the war, and how the biomedical landscape of the time affected the way history unfolded... Ohler's book makes a powerful case for the centrality of drugs to the Nazi war effort." --The New Republic "Explosive ... Ohler describes the chemical ignition of the first assault on the Western front with a novelist's flair." -- Rolling Stone "I had thought nothing could make [Nazis] more horrifying, but that was before I encountered Blitzed. Now I know the only thing more terrifying than the Nazis are the Nazis on meth ... Blitzed is not your typical history book ... It's amazing that biographers haven't focused on the drug angle this rigorously."