(Publisher's Note: The author failed to fold my laundry in the proper
manner, so I am letting the cat out of the bag-these are not actual
biographies. They are closer to maps of the author's ego than they are
texts about the namesakes adorning their covers. So, if you want to read
about Freud or Douglass or Hitler I suggest you do so elsewhere.) An
icon of true evil, Adolf Hitler is arguably the most important figure of
the twentieth century. No one has so patently demonstrated the horrific
capabilities of mankind. In Hitler: The Terminal Biography, D. Harlan
Wilson tracks the life of the infamous monomaniac from struggling artist
to mass murderer. Based on more than ten years of archival research and
German sociological study, this one-volume account covers ground
previously uncharted by other biographers, drawing heavily on newfound
diaries, letters, memos, and phonograph recordings of Hitler's closest
confidants as well as the Führer himself.