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Description
'Riveting, timely and truly revelatory . . . The Nazi-era secret that still needs to emerge from the shadows' DAMIEN LEWIS
Adolf Hitler hailed the Organisation Todt as the greatest construction group of all time. It was from the OT that he enlisted the nation's leading engineers and architects to build his empire of dreams.
Founded by Fritz Todt and led by Albert Speer, the OT would become a key partner to the SS and the Wehrmacht and lead to the deaths of millions. Its gargantuan projects – from the building of earth-shattering rockets to the bulwark of the Westwall – were made possible by Germany's slave labour system, the largest exploitation of foreign labour since the end of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. And yet it largely managed to slip under the radar of prosecutors after Germany's defeat. Taking us from the Arctic Circle to the Balkans, Unknown Enemy finally reveals its dark story.
'Provides a mass of readable information on how Organisation Todt exhibited some of the most brutal aspects of Nazi rule … Dick has well and truly put the organisation on the historical map' Richard J. Evans, LITERARY REVIEW
'Well-researched and scholarly . . . Reminds us how many criminals got away' Simon Heffer, TELEGRAPH
'Dick has done a major service to the history of the Third Reich' RICHARD OVERY
Product details
Published | 04 Jun 2026 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 352 |
ISBN | 9781526665966 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Dimensions | 198 x 129 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Riveting, timely and truly revelatory. The Organisation Todt is the Nazi-era secret that still needs to emerge from the shadows. Charles Dick's book does that and so much more
DAMIEN LEWIS, author of SAS Brothers in Arms and The Nazi Hunters
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Well-researched and scholarly . . . Reminds us how many criminals got away . . . When the Second World War came, OT had new priorities: the Atlantic Wall, submarine pens, mines . . . This is where Dick lifts up the stone: much of what OT achieved, or tried to achieve, required slave labour. As such, OT played its part in the Final Solution and other war crimes. The book is a depressing reminder that most of the leaders of the organisation, and the chief brutes who worked under them, got away with it
Simon Heffer, Telegraph
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Dick writes well and provides a mass of readable information on how Organisation Todt exhibited some of the most brutal aspects of Nazi rule, above all in its treatment of foreign workers. His two books have well and truly put the organisation on the historical map
Richard J. Evans, Literary Review
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Charles Dick has done a major service to the history of the Third Reich … The Organisation Todt exploited camp prisoners and forced labourers as ruthlessly and murderously as the better-known SS, but its responsibility has never been properly explored. Dick gives us more “ordinary men” capable of committing inhuman crimes, a story still pertinent in today's troubled world
RICHARD OVERY, author of Blood and Ruins
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Deeply researched, thorough and well argued – an excellent study of an often forgotten part of the Nazi past
JAN RÜGER, author of Heligoland
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Full of acute insights and arresting details … A vital contribution to our understanding of Nazi terror and the Third Reich
NIKOLAUS WACHSMANN, author of KL: A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps