On Sunday, April 28, 2013 4:28:50 AM UTC-10, MANITOBIAN wrote:
> Isn't Martin Bormann given the credit for keeping a diary like
> record of things that Hitler said and did?
...later
> What I am talking about is best described in this paragraph
> written by Albert Speer in his book INSIDE THE THIRD REICH.
...
> Not table talk!
If you want to be literal, you must be talking about a practically
useless appointment book where Bormann would write a sentence or
so about the day... I haven't seen it except for a quote or two.
More interesting is a book of his letters to his wife, in which I
have seen quite interesting quotes... sounds worth a look. But for
his diary of what what Hitler said, the answer has got to be Table
Talk, or at least the first several months where he did the transcript.
The only reliable snapshot of informal Hitler was done by the Finns
in a secret recording which can be found in
archive.org . He's all
carrot, no stick. Soft, self-deprecating, self-mocking, but creepy
all the same with an insistence of doing all the talking. Albert
Speer did a better job of describing Hitlers day to day style buried
in his Spandau book than in his "Inside the" best seller. In Spandau
he reflected about what was missing in the understanding of Hitler,
that didn't come out in the news-driven other accounts.
Also in
archive.org is a small part of Goebbels diary, with frequent
worshipful mentions of contact with the "leader". I believe that
version was one published by the reich for propaganda purposes, so is
very suspect. His other diary parts were since published, but one part
is often missing which only recently filtered out from Russia. It's
interesting to see scholars cross reference these, like how Goebbels
kept Hitler awake half the night before D day talking about art...
so he was allowed to sleep late instead of approving reserves to move.