| The
Extraordinary Life of Josef Ganz - The Jewish
Engineer Behind Hitler's Volkswagen
The astonishing biography
of Josef Ganz, a Jewish designer from Frankfurt, who in
May 1931 created a revolutionary small car: the Maikäfer
(German for May bug). Seven years later Hitler introduced
the Volkswagen. He not only 'took' the concept of Ganz's
family car, he even used the same nickname. To this day
the VW Beetle or Bug is considered one of the most
important of all automobile designs. It incorporated many
of the features of Ganz's original Maikäfer, yet until
recently Ganz received no recognition for his pioneering
work. The Nazis did all they could to keep the Jewish
godfather of the German compact car out of the history
books.
Now Paul Schilperoord sets
the record straight. In a biography that reads like a spy
thriller, he tells how Ganz was imprisoned by the Gestapo,
until an influential friend with connections to Göring
helped secure his release. Soon afterwards he was forced
to flee Germany while Porsche created the Volkswagen for
Hitler using many of his groundbreaking ideas. Ganz was
hunted by the Nazis even beyond Germany's borders and
narrowly escaped assassination. After the war he moved to
Australia, where he died in 1967. This biography is a
great read for anyone interested in World War II, Jewish
history, the evolution of car design or simply the life
stories of extraordinary individuals.
Download
publisher's brochure for the book
Download
SCB Distributors' catalog for fall 2011
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