Hitler, Mussolini, and Me

by Charles Davis

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1938, Hitler visits Italy. An expatri-ate Irish art historian is obliged to guide Mussolini and his guest round the galleries. Half fascinated, half repelled, he watches the tyrants, wrestling with the uneasy conviction that he ought to use the opportunity to 'do something' about them yet lacking the zeal that might trans-form misgivings into action. Thirty years later, his daughter comes across a compromising clip-ping showing her father with the dictators. Exposed as a collaborator, the narrator explains what happened, what he did and did not do, and why, revealing in the process the part the girl's mother played in promoting the digestive disorders that were to influence the course of the war. To help his daughter understand, he conjures a time before the crime that would define the century, a time before these men became monsters inflated to fit that crime, showing her the tawdry little people behind the myths, the real Hitler and Mussolini, The Flatulent Windbag and The Constipated Prick. Based on historical events and using the tyrants' own words, "Hitler, Mussolini, and Me" brings the dicta-tors down to earth, describing the murkier, more scurrilous aspects of their careers, and using jokes and scatology to weave a crazed path-way toward a cracked kind of mo-rality. It is the story of an ordinary man living in extraordinary times, times when being ordinary was an act of rebellion in itself.
  • ISBN10 1579624324
  • ISBN13 9781579624323
  • Publish Date 30 June 2016 (first published 17 May 2016)
  • Publish Status Unknown
  • Imprint Permanent Press (NY)
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 232
  • Language English