Cambridge University Press 1995. Hardback with dust jacket, 347 pp
Far more than a conflict of imperial aggression, World War II was
about "blood and soil," a fight to determine who would control the
earth's resources and which races would be exterminated because they
were deemed inferior or undesirable. This collection of essays, many
never before published in English, illuminates the nature of the Nazi
system and its impact on Germany and the world. Included are careful
examinations of the Holocaust, the connections between the European and
Pacific theaters of war, a comparative analysis of the leadership styles
of Hitler, Stalin, Tojo, and Roosevelt and a look back at postwar
Germany.