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Germany's War: The Origins, Aftermath & Atrocities of World War II

By John Wear. Establishment historians characterize National Socialist Germany as a uniquely barbaric, vile and criminal regime that was totally responsible for starting World War II and carrying out some of the most heinous war crimes in world history.

Germany’s War by John Wear refutes this characterization of Germany, bring history into accord with the facts. It documents that the Allied leaders of the Soviet Union, Great Britain and the United States were primarily responsible for starting and prolonging World War II—costing million of lives. Far from being the conqueror of Europe, Adolf Hitler was its savior.

$25.00
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My Revolutionary Life

By General Leon Degrelle. Here is Gen. Leon Degrelle’s autobiographical account of his daring escape from war-ravaged Germany in 1945 and his adventures after the war. Sentenced to death by firing squad in absentia by the Belgian government after the war, Degrelle lived in Spain for over 50 years after flying his way across Europe and crash-landing on a Spanish beach, barely surviving. Degrelle’s My Revolutionary Life—a 217-page volume—has never appeared in print as a book before—and is available only from The Barnes Review.

$27.00
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World War Two Turning Points

World War Two Turning Points: The Secret Decisions, Forgotten Blunders, and Cover-Ups That Really Determined Its Outcome. Second Edition: Revised, Updated and Expanded By Frank Joseph. Was the course of the Second World War decided at the battles of Stalingrad, El Alamein, Normandy, and Midway? Did Japan decide to surrender after the atom bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Was Hitler an “incompetent military leader” whose bungling orders condemned the German armed forces to defeat? This engrossing and encyclopedic work answers all these questions and many more, in a survey of the real causes of the ultimate outcome of that conflict—and reveals that the traditional interpretation of the war’s progress is not only false, but often deliberately misleading.

$18.00
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Who Started World War One?

By Harry Elmer Barnes. WWI: It was the first of the devastating modern wars, involving nations from across the globe and resulting in millions of casualties—both civilians and soldiers. "The Germans started the war"—that is what we have been told by those who wrote the history of World War I.

But how much blame should Germany really bear? And what about Austria-Hungary, England, Russia, Belgium, Italy and France?

$6.00
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Truth for Germany: The Guilt Question of the Second World War

By Udo Walendy. For seven decades, the mainstream historical establishment has insisted that World War II was started by Germany. But what facts exist to support this seemingly unchallengeable hypothesis?

In Truth for Germany: The Guilt Question of the Second World War, the myth of Germany’s guilt for fomenting the Second World War is refuted by famed German historian Udo Walendy.

$30.00
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The Third Rome: Holy Russia, Tsarism and Orthodoxy

By Dr. M. Raphael Johnson. The writer is a former editor of TBR. Academic historians, liberals and Communists have been fashioning a fantasy world around Russian history for nearly 100 years, spreading slander and myth about an entire population.

Here's the first book in English that sets out to defend the history of Tsarist Russia from St. Vladimir to Tsar St. Nicholas II—Russia before bloody Bolshevism.

$25.00
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The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914

By Christopher Clark. These are heady days for historians. While the 1990s saw one 50-year retrospective after another on the Second World War, for those writing on the First World War the centennial of all centennials is fast approaching.

After a century it remains the ultimate historical whodunit. How did Europe, at the height of its glory, commit collective suicide, drowning centuries of progress in the bloodletting of 1914–18?

$20.00
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The Pity of War: Explaining World War I

By Niall Ferguson. In The Pity of War, author Niall Ferguson makes a simple and provocative argument: that the human atrocity known as World War I was England’s fault.

The war, however, was not inevitable, Ferguson argues, but rather the result of the mistaken decisions of individuals who would later claim to have been in the grip of clandestine forces.

$29.00
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