Hitler's Last Witness (Paperback)
The Memoirs of Hitler's Bodyguard
Pages: 272
Illustrations: 64
ISBN: 9781473899025
Published: 4th May 2017
Last Released: 27th February 2024
National Online Publicity
As featured by;
- The Sun - How Adolf Hitler's bodyguard described the evil dictator as a 'good boss' and revealed all about the Fuhrer's gory suicide
- Mail Online - Bodyguard who found Hitler and Eva Braun's dead bodies and once walked in on Fuhrer's mistress in a flimsy nightie reveals intimate details of their private lives in candid photos
- Daily Express - Adolf Hitler’s bodyguard reveals final moments of the Fuhrer and Eva Braun in the bunker
- The Independent - Adolf Hitler's 'last bodyguard' reveals what happened in Nazi leader’s final minutes in the Berlin bunker
- Mirror Online - Personal bodyguard on life in the bunker and how Nazi dictator and wife Eva Braun committed suicide
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After being seriously wounded in the 1939 Polish campaign, Rochus Misch was invited to join Hitler's SS-bodyguard. There he served until the war's end as Hitler’s bodyguard, courier, orderly and finally as Chief of Communications.
On the Berghoff terrace he watched Eva Braun organize parties; observed Heinrich Himmler and Albert Speer; and monitored telephone conversations from Berlin to the East Prussian Headquarters on 20 July 1944 after the attempt on Hitler's life. Towards the end Misch was drawn into the Fuhrerbunker with the last of the faithful. As defeat approached, he remained in charge of the bunker switchboard as his duty required, even after Hitler committed suicide.
Misch knew Hitler as the private man and his position was one of unconditional loyalty. His memoirs offer an intimate view of life in close attendance to Hitler and of the endless hours deep inside the bunker; and provide new insights into military events such as Hitler’s initial feelings that the 6th Army should pull out of Stalingrad. Shortly before he died Misch wrote a new introduction for this English-language edition.
This fascinating collection of memoirs and interviews paints an intimate picture of Hitler by members of his household.
ARGrunners Magazine
It provides invaluable insights of the Fuhrer’s unusual psyche, contributing to our better understanding who it really was behind the Hitler mask.
Hitler’s Last Witness was a text I was very interested in both reading and reviewing especially in light of the exploration of possible escapes from the Berlin bunker complex now being aired on television. The book by Rochus Misch was no disappointment, it is a fantastic read both for a historian or merely the general enthusiast of the period. It is a very good look from a primary source well located to make remarks and notes on the coming and goings from the command headquarters of the Third Reich. It is well written and makes for riveting reading and not too lengthy at 254 pages but packed with detail and good photographs.
Richard P. Wade, Military Historian
The value and importance of this work I feel is too document various periods within the conduct of the war from the center of the German command, and place them in context with subsequent accounts. Rochus receives some stiff words from noted historian Roger Moorhouse on his stated bias and prejudices which I thought were somewhat standard for his period and feel any post war apologize or mitigations unnecessary in regards to his story and foundation; which was to rely the facts as he saw and recorded them versus owning any responsibility for the results or individual service during that time. Which would have lessen in my opinion the value of the book and Misch’s account.
I would highly recommend the book as a very telling expose on the period and a well detailed look at how the inner circle of Germany in the war conducted themselves. I found the detailed section on Rudolf Hess and his flight to Scotland very interesting as well as the entire late war period where the pressure built up while the Soviet Red Army closes in on Berlin. The individual work of the co-authors really shines in this release and gives the material a solid flow and readability. For its size it is a stellar read of a period in which there remains a great deal of fog. It does a very good job in telling the final chapter of a regime in its death throes. Rochus Misch account provides great worth of detail in the people and circumstances of the late war period. It is well worth the price and will continue to serve as a first rate reference of Hitler’s final days.
As featured in
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As featured in.
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Elite Daily
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The Independent 22/3/17
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The Sun 21/3/17
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The Daily Mail 21/3/17
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The Express 21/3/17
These are the long awaited recollections of a man seen on international television for over a decade regarding his eyewitness testimony of all things in the last days of the Nazi regime.
The Military Advisor
And the wait is well worth it too, as this fine you-are-there work puts the reader right in the centre of events, just as they transpired. Misch - who served with Hitler as an SS bodyguard during 1940-45, and telephone switchboard operator during the fabled final days - tells his tale in such an honest and straightforward fashion that one readily accepts many versions of things he witnessed.
While most narratives and other biographical accounts focus on Hitler as German warlord, Nazi Party leader, and tyrant who unleashed indefensible suffering and death on the world, Misch’s autobiography provides insight on Hitler “behind closed doors.” While this is a provocative yet disturbing account, it is an important addition to the historiography of the last days of the Third Reich.
International Bibliography of Military History
This is a great book, showcasing a very intimate part of history, and presented very well. Well worth checking out for anyone interested in Hitler's personal life, or the internal workings of the Third Reich.
Suppressing Fire
Reading a first hand account of this time in history was fascinating! It was intriguing to see one man's point of view and the things he experienced.
Goodreads Review
The author does not cast judgements or give assumptions as fact like most authors do. He writes about what he saw & heard during his time as an SS soldier. The story flows smoothly and gives a personal view of events during this time.
NetGalley (Philip Boyde)
Rochus Misch's memoir is a thoroughly readable, informative and frequently fascinating insider's account of various events during and aspects of a momentous period of history, by a man who - with a very few others - was privileged to witness much that was historic, cataclysmic, sometimes bizarre, and finally nihilistic, but whose rank and position meant that he always lacked the opportunity, access or personal desire to influence that which he heard or observed.
David Stone - Military Historian & Author
This is a book that was worth writing and, when compared to the many other books about Hitler and his way of life, adds to the pool of knowledge.
Firetrench
Fascinating. Highly recommended!
Cybermodeler
Excellent view from within the Third Reich, perhaps Misch is naive about the regime! But his view and opinion is tempered by the fact that massacres were not conducted in the halls of the Reichs Chancellary. It's a must read due to his fly on the wall status within the bunker in the last days of the what can only be described as hell on earth.
Netgalley
‘An insignificant man, who experienced significant events.’
Neue Zürcher Zeitung
‘Misch glorifies nothing, criticizes nothing and justifies nothing, not even himself. He has a sharp eye for detail, which despite the passage of the years he depicts in a credible manner.’
Göttinger Tageblatt
‘The memoirs of Hitler’s bodyguard and unquestioning servant who was one of the last people to see him alive.’
The Times
‘ . . . convincing first-person testimony (of) the dictator’s final desperate months, days and hours.’
Huffington Post
‘[Misch’s] memoir is full of details, asides and digressions, which allow the reader a rare and fascinating insight into the Third Reich’s inner sanctum . . . Misch overheard conversations, watched the comings and goings and was a keen observer of events . . . He was as close to being a ‘fly on the wall’ as one could get.’
Roger Moorhouse, author Berlin at War
About Rochus Misch
Born in 1917 ROCHUS MISCH was recruited into Hitler’s SS-bodyguard in 1940. He served as a bodyguard, courier and telephonist for five years. After Hitler’s death he was held in Russian captivity for nine years. He died in 2013. ROGER MOORHOUSE is the author of Killing Hitler and Berlin at War.
I Served With Hitler in the Trenches In the Field, 1914–1918 (Hardback)
This remarkable book details the shared experiences of Hans von Mend and his comrade in arms, Adolf Hitler, throughout almost the whole of the First World War. Mend writes of his call-up as a reservist in July 1914 and of joining the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment, more commonly known as List Regiment after its commander Colonel List. It was then that he first met the 25-year-old Hitler. Together, they marched out to the front, and to Flanders, where the regiment was involved in the struggle for Wytschaete, where few men survived unscathed. Hitler was one of those, being promoted to lance-corporal…
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