First edition of Berlin Diary (1941) by William L. Shirer — an extraordinary firsthand journal by the CBS correspondent stationed in Berlin during Hitler’s rise to power. Published months before the U.S. entered WWII, it’s a gripping real-time view of history unfolding. Classic Knopf binding with red and black detailing — a true time capsule of the early 1940s.
Author: William L. Shirer
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf, New York
Copyright: 1940, 1941 by William L. Shirer
Published: June 20, 1941
Edition: First Edition, First Printing
🧠 Background & Historical Importance
William Shirer was an American journalist stationed in Berlin for CBS Radio in the years leading up to WWII. Berlin Diary was published in mid-1941, just months before the U.S. entered the war, making it one of the first insider accounts of Hitler’s Germany written by a Western journalist who had seen it firsthand.
It’s a powerful mix of daily notes, political observations, and personal reflections — and it shocked American readers at the time for its honesty and sense of looming disaster. This edition predates his later classic, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (1960).
📘 Design & Features
Classic Knopf teal-blue cloth with red and black stamped title box — very 1940s modernist styling.
The typography on the title page (the “zigzag” framing) is pure Knopf aesthetic — clean, authoritative, and wartime austere.
Early printings like this one often have a slightly heavier paper stock and a distinct “wartime pulp tone.”