Having fled to Paris in January 1933, symbolically
on the very day Hitler seized power in Germany, Joseph
Roth wrote a series of articles in that 'hour before the
end of the world', that he foresaw was coming and which
would see the exterminatory consolidation of Hitler's
barbarism, the Second World War and most crucially for
Roth, the final irreversible destruction of a pan
European consciousness. The majority of this collection
of Roth's haunting, acidly percipient, and sometimes
blackly comic journalistic essays have never before been
translated into English and they form the latest
installment in Hesperus' bestselling On series. Incisive
and ironic, the writing evokes Roth's bitterness,
frustration and morbid despair at the coming
annihilation of the free world while displaying his
great nostalgia for the Hapsburg Empire into which he
was born and his ingrained fear of nationalism in any
form. Detailing the duplicities and grotesque
criminalities of the Nazi regime, Roth denounces the
terror sewn by Nazi storm troopers, the propaganda of
Goebbels, the round ups, the assassinations and the
construction of concentration camps, alongside the
seeming blindness and somnambulism of the rest of
Europe, which appeared paralysed in the face of Nazi
radicalism and its relentless expansion. Following the
Anchluss in 1938, Roth, cut off from his homeland,
isolated in a Paris itself gradually darkening under the
looming shadow of war, sunk into a self destructive
alcoholism which led inexorably to his desolate end the
following year in a Parisian hospital. Within twelve
months the German blitzkrieg had overrun Paris.
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