Hitler's illegitimate daughter? Although it sounds like an old tabloid headline, it's the topic of a perceptive novel by one of Britain's great living authors, A.N. Wilson. Written in the form of a disgruntled memoir penned in the bleak years of East Germany, it concerns the relationship between Winifred Wagner, daughter-in-law of the great composer, and that composer's most infamous fan. Ultimately the much-rumored fascination between Adolf and Winifred is less interesting than Wilson's profound understanding for the power of Wagner's music and the cultural and social unease that gave rise to Nazism.
Winnie and Wolf (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), by A.N. Wilson
Book Review