Christa Schroeder was a long-serving secretary to Adolph Hitler and other Nazi Party elite. Her matter-of-fact insider’s account is an intimate view of Hitler’s inner circle right up its final days. Her book is an excellent companion to the classic autobiographical account by Traudl Junge, Hitler’s Last Secretary. Both give an insider’s view of a much softer and gentler Adolph Hitler. Just as I noted in my 2013 review of Junge’s book, Schroeder also shows us something of the charmer that Hitler could be. This helps to present a fuller picture of Adolph Hitler, the man, rather than the mercurial megalomaniac we tend to see through general history. Schroeder, more than Junge, tends to show a softer Hitler, one that was more vulnerable than we would expect. I wonder if it is for this reason perhaps that Hitler inspired such intense loyalty of those closest to him. Schroeder is far less introspective than Junge. Junge’s autobiography agonizingly ponders her actions in serving Hitler yet in the end she claimed she really didn’t know what kind of person he really was. Schroeder doesn’t claim not to know. Yet she definitely knows that members of the inner circle were punished and executed. Did she know of the extent of the Final Solution and the Holocaust, she doesn’t directly ponder or even mention. According to her, politics wasn’t discussed in the relaxing moments she shared in this inner-circle, yet I find it impossible to believe that in her 12-13 years of service to Hitler and the Nazi elite that this topic never came up. Just as I observed in Junge’s review, the anti-semitism had to be there but just didn’t bother Schroeder, at least not enough for her to do something about it. Schroeder doesn’t present herself as an unknowing victim, which is somewhat of Junge’s defense. I conclude Schroeder knew who she worked for, and accepted it fully. Even long after the war, she did maintain relationships with other surviving members of the inner circle, even though by then she had to “know” fully the horrors the committed by Nazis. She seems to have accepted her choices with no apology or remorse.