Is Tomorrow Hitler's? 200 Questions on the Battle of Mankind

audiobook

Is Tomorrow Hitler's? 200 Questions on the Battle of Mankind

by H. R. (Hubert Renfro) Knickerbocker

EN·~12 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

IS TOMORROW HITLER’S?

0:28
2

FOREWORD

7:17
3

INTRODUCTION

6:30
4

1\. GERMANY

2:55:12
5

2\. RUSSIA

1:39:22
6

3\. ENGLAND

1:34:12
7

4\. WAR AIMS

1:36:08
8

5\. FRANCE

1:57:28
9

6\. THE UNITED STATES

1:31:50
10

7\. FIFTH COLUMNISTS

1:16:54

Description

From the vantage point of a seasoned foreign correspondent, this volume prompts listeners to examine the pivotal dilemmas that shaped the twentieth century. The author weaves together vivid recollections of diplomatic salons, war‑torn streets, and high‑level meetings, offering a narrator’s eye‑witness to the uneasy peace of the 1920s and the storm clouds gathering over Europe. Each of the 200 questions serves as a springboard for thoughtful analysis, inviting you to grapple with the forces that drove nations toward conflict.

The book balances rich historical detail with a probing curiosity that feels both scholarly and conversational. By framing each query within anecdotes of real‑world encounters—from Berlin cafés to the Danube’s icy currents—it encourages you to consider how individual choices intersected with grand geopolitical shifts. As you listen, you’ll be drawn into a reflective dialogue about power, ideology, and the enduring question of whether history repeats itself.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~12 hours (746K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Tim Lindell, Craig Kirkwood, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)

Release date

2021-09-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

H. R. (Hubert Renfro) Knickerbocker

H. R. (Hubert Renfro) Knickerbocker

1898–1949

A globe-trotting journalist with a taste for big, dangerous stories, he won a Pulitzer Prize for reporting on the Soviet Five-Year Plan and became known for vivid firsthand coverage from Europe between the wars. His books carry the speed and urgency of a reporter who liked to see history up close.

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