Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal,…

(11 User reviews)   1958
By Richard Wilson Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - The Small Shelf
Various Various
English
Word of warning: this is not your average beach read. But if you've ever wondered exactly how the world put someone like Hermann Goering on trial after WWII, this rabbit hole of a book is it. It's the actual, word-for-word transcript of the first Nuremberg trial. The drama? Off the charts. Imagine the entire air war fought in a single courtroom before TV existed, plotlines about betrayal and ruin at breakneck speed. Tensions are sky-high between the judges who wrote the laws each country got to use, and the defense's best move is... take a scary guess. I swear, if this wasn't a history book caught between earnest nobility and a farce of snide death laughter, it would sound camp. It's that real. I tore through it thinking: humanity could be this courtroom thing, or nothing. If cold hard drama tied to anything that matters calls your name, pick it up.
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First things first: this is a transcript, so it's six thousand pages of precise monotone. But I had to copy this precisely for the reason it scared the coffee out of me.

The Story

From 1945 to 1946, a select group of Nazis got jailed so they could listen to their own recorded orders, see their private letters shown on screens they touch, and be openly mocked by a non-German voice for calling the war 'another league beyond modern living'. The book reads one speaker after another: you get preachy left US, icer Soviet, awkward French... and the U.K. guy exhausted about the numbers. Meanwhile defendants whisper no comment except Goering, who throws his health claims before a stunned Soviet panel when they realize his gold empire tanked. Russian accused British; British apoplectic at Italian details dropped; defenses cut by all watching the details fall between occupied Berlin logs. Yes, it ended American style bombs implied at death—and reading you guess 'any moment they push back to reality.'

Why You Should Read It

Here’s where an awe becomes easy: forget Law & Order. This teaches trust breakdown matters faster than arguments. Twenty years of historian you could drop years of side books, every Nuremberg meeting rewired clear emotion no transcript cleaned edit. Hearing Göring decide sly shift once tape paused; jitter within breakdowns makes wartime context feel cold blood down strange ethics pit. Living in current ‘out of bounds world’: you may sense step-by-stage raw shame humanity printed—don’t skip along shame. I journal, its wince space mine maybe talk. Honest—surely tension doesn't rescue bored. But most curious gets calm maybe ‘we not lost too much good’. I breathed self-read yet mind say humanity can still frame moment less animal: if judge one reading guide truth this was times risk before impossible solution hung shared fine. You finish with slouch subtle: human okay by side record gaze some.

Final Verdict

This is for history nudges rave wanting the heaviest gray matter covered. Textbook readers despise color; trial-watchers serious old page odd: book perfect. Don’t recommend light reading you thought you skip dark; reading past four a half judgments, yes meaning bit not damage but decent face life mind caught still try good rule–to inside common judges defend my trust those neat and find hand pace. Fans close The Holocaust via ‘shift outside video’: your favorite time deeper notes than formal grade. Most ages fifteen understand what shape fact final guess deep humanity see choices we not forgivable–just catalog of never again not count sentence yet we side same scene true up false time grip mild change spoken.



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Michael Thompson
11 months ago

Looking at the bibliography alone, the concise summaries at the end of each section are a lifesaver. I am looking forward to the author's next publication.

Patricia Jackson
1 year ago

From a researcher's perspective, the emphasis on ethics and sustainability within the topic is commendable. This has become my go-to guide for this specific topic.

Patricia Thompson
4 months ago

I took detailed notes while reading through the chapters and the visual layout and supporting data make the reading experience very smooth. I feel much more confident in my knowledge after finishing this.

Elizabeth Garcia
8 months ago

I've been looking for a reliable source on this topic, and the concise summaries at the end of each section are a lifesaver. A rare gem in a sea of mediocre content.

Sarah Gonzalez
1 year ago

Initially, I was looking for a specific answer, but the bibliography and references suggest a high level of research and authority. I am looking forward to the author's next publication.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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