
Peter Neumann (7) (1925–)
Author of The Black March: The Personal Story of an S.S. Man
For other authors named Peter Neumann, see the disambiguation page.
Works by Peter Neumann
Other mens Graves 1 copy
SS 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Darville, Claude
- Birthdate
- 1925
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
The black march; the personal story of an SS man. Translated from the French by Constantine FitzGibbon by Peter Neumann
I'm not sure this is real memoirs or not, but if it is, the tale is chilling, and these guys were very tough, and good soldiers. But their cynicism, that many of them expect to be rewarded with soft civilian jobs after the victory of the Reich is very daunting. I do see it is possible to extract that level of dedication from a body of fighting men, but it is hard to see how to do it without a heavy dose of ideological input. so do read it, but have some doubts as to whether the whole story show more is being laid out here. show less
The back of the book made the contents sound much worse than they were.
It sounded like an in depth look at the Nazi Youth machine that turned wide eyed children into monsters fueled on hate. And it did touch on that in the first 30 pages that sounded more like contrite backwards propaganda than actual journal entries. The rest of the book is basically an account of the different battles and places that Neumann went to.
Maybe in 1958 it was exciting and ground breaking, but most of what it show more brings to light is now common knowledge about the SS and its actions.
Not a bad read, but unless you're into battle ground technicalities of the German-Russian front in WWII I wouldn't bother. Just read the back cover and let your imagination take you further. show less
It sounded like an in depth look at the Nazi Youth machine that turned wide eyed children into monsters fueled on hate. And it did touch on that in the first 30 pages that sounded more like contrite backwards propaganda than actual journal entries. The rest of the book is basically an account of the different battles and places that Neumann went to.
Maybe in 1958 it was exciting and ground breaking, but most of what it show more brings to light is now common knowledge about the SS and its actions.
Not a bad read, but unless you're into battle ground technicalities of the German-Russian front in WWII I wouldn't bother. Just read the back cover and let your imagination take you further. show less
Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 82
- Popularity
- #220,760
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 50
- Languages
- 6

