Something to Remember Me By

The Hitler Contagion

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Something to Remember Me By by Hale McCaffley, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Hale McCaffley ISBN: 9781483518411
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: February 24, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Hale McCaffley
ISBN: 9781483518411
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: February 24, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English
For a brief period towards the end of the second world war, Heinz Linge was Hitler’s barber. He washes up in America with a few mementos of his life in Nazi Germany. He marries, has a family and settles down to a new life in his new country. His children are clever and compassionate, like him and his wife. There is a strong thread of biology running through this story. Linge confronts the echoes of Hitlerism in his new country. His children grow up and pursue careers in research and nursing. New initiatives in biology are explored and Hitler’s life is viewed through the prism of viral infection. The new biology unites Hitler with modern thought and grants fragments of him a place in the here and now. The role of viruses in human development is considered. There is more to humans than the mere transmission of parental genes from one generation to the next and Hitler embodies the inadequacy of this way of thinking. His mother and father do not prepare the world for the delivery of a monster into its midst. Hitler was not the ‘imago of Linz’. Christianity shines through and defeats Hitlerism. Linge’s daughter, Elizabeth, is the simple heroine of the story. There was never really a contest between Elizabeth’s Christianity and Hitler’s mad ravings, the outcome was never in doubt. There was no philosophy propounded by Hitler to set against Christianity. The man simply had no ideas other than fanciful, Wagnerian dreams of Germanic bliss, an enfeebled romanticism and a sick, twisted hatred of Jews and all things Jewish.His mind was fatally corrupted by an illness visited on him as a teenager. It left him a violent, essentially empty vessel. Read today,‘Mein Kampf’ is incomprehensible. It’s like a belch that contaminates the world with its foul emanations. Linge and his family are good people, even great people, who, between them, overcome the legacy of evil left to them by Hitler.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
For a brief period towards the end of the second world war, Heinz Linge was Hitler’s barber. He washes up in America with a few mementos of his life in Nazi Germany. He marries, has a family and settles down to a new life in his new country. His children are clever and compassionate, like him and his wife. There is a strong thread of biology running through this story. Linge confronts the echoes of Hitlerism in his new country. His children grow up and pursue careers in research and nursing. New initiatives in biology are explored and Hitler’s life is viewed through the prism of viral infection. The new biology unites Hitler with modern thought and grants fragments of him a place in the here and now. The role of viruses in human development is considered. There is more to humans than the mere transmission of parental genes from one generation to the next and Hitler embodies the inadequacy of this way of thinking. His mother and father do not prepare the world for the delivery of a monster into its midst. Hitler was not the ‘imago of Linz’. Christianity shines through and defeats Hitlerism. Linge’s daughter, Elizabeth, is the simple heroine of the story. There was never really a contest between Elizabeth’s Christianity and Hitler’s mad ravings, the outcome was never in doubt. There was no philosophy propounded by Hitler to set against Christianity. The man simply had no ideas other than fanciful, Wagnerian dreams of Germanic bliss, an enfeebled romanticism and a sick, twisted hatred of Jews and all things Jewish.His mind was fatally corrupted by an illness visited on him as a teenager. It left him a violent, essentially empty vessel. Read today,‘Mein Kampf’ is incomprehensible. It’s like a belch that contaminates the world with its foul emanations. Linge and his family are good people, even great people, who, between them, overcome the legacy of evil left to them by Hitler.

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book 31 Spiritual Lessons I Learned From My Dog by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The Ursa Web by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The First Time... by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book Ano'Ano: The Seed by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The Pixie and the Witch by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book Berry Berry Special by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book True Abs and Beyond by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The Darkest of Green by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book Christopher Grey's 101 Inspiring Poses for Beauty and Glamour Photographers by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The Ultimate Guide to the Complete Law of Attraction by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book Its Human Nature by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The Sexy Mama's Guide to Money (Mothers' Edition) by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book Born on St. Patrick's Day by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book A Season to Remember by Hale McCaffley
Cover of the book The Little Book Of Retorts by Hale McCaffley
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy