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Fateful Hours: The Collapse of the Weimar Republic

Fateful Hours: The Collapse of the Weimar Republic

by Volker Ullrich; Jefferson Chase

W. W. Norton & Company ·2025 ·384 pages
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About This Book

From the New York Times best-selling historian, the riveting story of the Weimar Republic—a fledgling democracy beset by chaos and extremism—and its dissolution into the Third Reich. Democracies are fragile. Freedoms that seem secure can be lost. Few historical events illustrate this as vividly as the failure of the Weimar Republic. Germany's first democracy endured for fourteen tumultuous years and culminated with the horrific rise of the Third Reich. As one commentator wrote in July 1933: Hitler had "won the game with little effort. . . . All he had to do was huff and puff—and the edifice of German politics collapsed like a house of cards." But this tragedy was not inevitable. In Fateful Hours, award-winning historian Volker Ullrich chronicles the captivating story of the Republic, capturing a nation and its people teetering on the abyss. Born from the ashes of the First World War, the fledgling democracy was saddled with debt and political instability from its beginning. In its early years, a relentless chain of crises—hyperinflation, foreign invasion, and upheaval from the right and left—shook the republic, only letting up during a brief period of stability in the 1920s. Social and cultural norms were upended. Political murder was the order of the day. Yet despite all the challenges, the Weimar Republic was not destined for its ignoble end. Drawing on letters, memoirs, newspaper articles, and other sources, Ullrich charts the many failed alternatives and missed opportunities that contributed to German democracy's collapse. In an immersive style that takes us to the heart of political power, Ullrich argues that, right up until January 1933, history was open. There was no shortage of opportunities to stop the slide into fascism. Just as in the present, it is up to us whether democracy lives or dies.


Reviews

"The parallels to our own time, as Ullrich lays them out in this fluent narrative, are alarming, with new authoritarian parties and governments following the fascist playbook in every detail ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"He does not draw much of a distinction between the tactical mistakes that gave the Nazis a minor leg up and the big structural failures that were preconditions for their success ..."

Oliver Moody· The Times (UK) Maybe Someday

"Though the main players may remain psychologically opaque, the road map to authoritarian disaster is laid out here in gleamingly sinister detail by a historian who knows the period as well as anyone could."

Casey Schwartz· The New York Times Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Ullrich shrewdly analyzes a succession of incidents that nudged the Republic toward the abyss ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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