A Surprising Find!

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When you are down in the stacks, sometimes an unassuming book can contain a treasure of information. The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan: A Pictorial History of the Final Days of World War II by Hans Dollinger is a plain book that once opened contains notices, letters, pictures, propaganda leaflets and so much more from both the Allies and Axis powers. Below are just a few (and I mean a few) snippets of what can be found in this book.

An excerpt:

Will Germany be able to save her soul?

by Franz Werfel

“It is a terrible trial you are facing, German men and women, a trial without equal in the history of the world. Not in the defeat of your proud armies, not in the ruins of your flourishing cities, not in the millions whom you have driven from their gutted homesteads and who are now wandering homeless through the lands–not in all this suffering, horrible though it is, lies the terrible rial you have to undergo. The same sorrow that now drives you hollow-eyed over your ruined streets, was what you cold-heartedly prepared for others, not even bothering to look back at all the havoc you had caused. The other nations have survived their suffering. You, too, will survive yours, but only on condition that you save your souls. And this is your terrible trial and the great question: Will Germany be able to save her soul?

Do you know that it was Germans who killed millions and millions of peaceable, harmless, and innocent people with methods that would make even the devil blush with shame? Do you know about the ovens and gas chambers of Maidanek, the dung-heap of rotting corpses in Buchenwald, Belsen, and hundreds of other hell camps like these? Do you know of the fertilizer and soap factories set up in the vicinity of many a camp, lest human fat and human bones be lost to the German economy? Have you heard about the commandant’s wife who had a predilection for lampshades made of human skins?

Many of you will pale, turn away and murmur: “What has all that to do with me?” That is just it: it has to with you you, with every least one of you. If ever the course of history has expressed God’s judgment, it has done here and now. Did you not boast of your “national communion,” in which the individual was no more than a fanatical atom, unconditionally serving the whole? It was not individual criminals, therefore who committed all these horrors, but your “communion,” in which each stood for all, and all for each. The crimes of National Socialism and the unspeakable denigration of German civilization are but the logical outcomes of the devilish exaltation of the rights of the strongest and the claim that right is merely what serves the nation, or rather a few party bosses and swindlers. Nothing can undo the fact that you not only heeded these devilish doctrines, but that you embraced them fervently, defending them with fire, steel, and blood. Never before has a less heroic generation boasted a more heroic philosophy. Too late have your eyes been opened to the revolting behavior of your leaders, bosses, and generals.”

From Ruhr Zeitung, 19 May 1945, pg. 314 in The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan

Summer Reading!

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I’m sure I’m in the majority when I say, “I’m so ready to go back to normal.” We’ve all had to sacrifice, change routines, and tried to make sense of everything that’s going on. The good news is that our library is still open and still has access to books. Yay!

You can come by and read, work on stuff, or place holds on books and pick them up (Sidenote: The library is still only swipe access for current students, faculty, and staff. When you click on any of the titles below a new tab will open and you can place a hold on the book there). Below are some books you can dive into this summer. Some are fun, distraction reading, while others are informative about a variety of topics.

If you need some distraction in your life:

Let’s Learn About Ourselves and Others

Science with a sprinkle of pandemic history

HERstory:

If you’re tired of binge-watching shows on Netflix…

Or want to learn about our country’s politics

And my own personal recommendations:

Much love and blessings!

Read it Before You See it!

Jane Austen’s books are so timeless, romantic, and funny. While most only look at her as a romance writer, her writings are truly subversive for her time and even today. Emma published in 1815 was Austen’s last novel to be completed and published during her life. Sidenote: Persuasion was the last novel Austen wrote but was published posthumously.

Emma centers around Emma Woodhouse a young girl who tries her hand at matchmaking and ends up causing many problems along the way. Filled with youthful hubris and the perils of misconstrued romance, it’s an enjoyable novel that explores the concerns and difficulties of genteel women living in Georgian-Regency England.

Since its publication, there have been many films, TV programs, stage plays and inspiration for many novels.

While I love the 1996 Emma, starring Gwyneth Paltrow as Emma Woodhouse, I’m particularly excited about this upcoming movie premiering this Friday. The trailers show that they are bringing in more of the comedy aspects of this novel than in previous iterations (granted, I have not seen all of them).

As Emma is my favorite Jane Austen novel, I do hope they do it justice.

The trailer for it is below, but also be sure to check out Emma by Jane Austen or a book about Jane Austen. We have plenty of them down in the stacks!