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The Kaiser’s Ghost and the Rocket Men: The Mad Engineers, Scrap-Metal Rockets, and Deluded Dreams of the Reich’s Last Stand
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235467705
- EAN9798235467705
- Date de parution15/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Can a nation build a miracle out of plywood, coal dust, and sheer denial?In the winter of 1944, the German war machine was a hollowed-out beast. Allied bombs rained down day and night, pulverizing steel mills, oil refineries, and aircraft factories. Yet, deep within the pine forests of the Black Forest and the damp, lightless caverns of abandoned salt mines, a strange and frantic activity hummed. Here, a cast of eccentric engineers, outcast inventors, and desperate regime lackeys were given free rein to build anything-absolutely anything-that might stave off the inevitable.
Under the shadow of the gallows, they drafted the future, building machines that looked less like weapons of war and more like the fever dreams of science fiction. These were not the polished, legendary machines of the early Blitzkrieg; these were the Volks-waffen-the People's Weapons. In his gripping new non-fiction masterwork, The Kaiser's Ghost and the Rocket Men, acclaimed historian Winston Maddox pulls back the curtain on the deepest, most desperate secrets of the Reich's twilight.
This is not a superficial list of specifications or a dry catalog of experimental aircraft. This book is a visceral journey into the claustrophobic underground bunkers where men like Alexander Lippisch designed delta-wing interceptors powered by crushed coal, and Erich Bachem built vertical-takeoff rocket interceptors out of scrap wood and glue. Through painstaking archival research, Maddox humanizes the sheer terror and fanatical ego that fueled these projects.
You will sit in the drafty, makeshift workshops where elite scientists, working alongside starving forced laborers, mixed highly corrosive glues that dissolved the very wooden aircraft they were building. You will feel the suffocating tension of the fierce, bitter rivalries between designers as they competed for the last scraps of aluminum and rocket fuel, all while the SS watched their every move, ready to execute anyone whose project failed to deliver a miracle.
This is the story of brilliant engineering completely untethered from reality-where genius and absolute delusion became indistinguishable. For the seasoned history enthusiast who demands more than the well-trodden battlefields of Normandy or Bastogne, this book offers an immersive plunge into the psychology of defeat. It explores how a highly civilized scientific community could convince itself that a young, untrained pilot, strapped inside a wooden rocket propelled by volatile chemicals, could somehow turn the tide of a global war.
It is a story of human ambition pushed to its absolute, terrifying limits. If the laws of physics are absolute, how did the dying regime convince its finest minds that they could engineer an escape from history itself?
Under the shadow of the gallows, they drafted the future, building machines that looked less like weapons of war and more like the fever dreams of science fiction. These were not the polished, legendary machines of the early Blitzkrieg; these were the Volks-waffen-the People's Weapons. In his gripping new non-fiction masterwork, The Kaiser's Ghost and the Rocket Men, acclaimed historian Winston Maddox pulls back the curtain on the deepest, most desperate secrets of the Reich's twilight.
This is not a superficial list of specifications or a dry catalog of experimental aircraft. This book is a visceral journey into the claustrophobic underground bunkers where men like Alexander Lippisch designed delta-wing interceptors powered by crushed coal, and Erich Bachem built vertical-takeoff rocket interceptors out of scrap wood and glue. Through painstaking archival research, Maddox humanizes the sheer terror and fanatical ego that fueled these projects.
You will sit in the drafty, makeshift workshops where elite scientists, working alongside starving forced laborers, mixed highly corrosive glues that dissolved the very wooden aircraft they were building. You will feel the suffocating tension of the fierce, bitter rivalries between designers as they competed for the last scraps of aluminum and rocket fuel, all while the SS watched their every move, ready to execute anyone whose project failed to deliver a miracle.
This is the story of brilliant engineering completely untethered from reality-where genius and absolute delusion became indistinguishable. For the seasoned history enthusiast who demands more than the well-trodden battlefields of Normandy or Bastogne, this book offers an immersive plunge into the psychology of defeat. It explores how a highly civilized scientific community could convince itself that a young, untrained pilot, strapped inside a wooden rocket propelled by volatile chemicals, could somehow turn the tide of a global war.
It is a story of human ambition pushed to its absolute, terrifying limits. If the laws of physics are absolute, how did the dying regime convince its finest minds that they could engineer an escape from history itself?






















