
Report from Nuremberg
The International War Crimes Trial
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Harold Burson
Audible brings to life through dramatic performance the 1945-1946 radio broadcast reports covering the greatest courtroom drama of the 20th century - the Nuremberg trials. The original broadcasts have been lost forever, but the verbatim text - written by Harold Burson, founding chairman of one of the world’s leading public relations firms, Burson Marsteller, who at the time was a reporter for the Armed Forces Network - has been newly interpreted by an ensemble of some of our fine actors. This original production, published here for the first time and only in audio, blends journalism, history, re-enactment and performance, and reimagines what it was like to experience first-hand this groundbreaking trial and to witness close-up some of the most infamous figures in recent world history: members of the Nazi ruling class. The production is being released on the anniversary of the opening of the first and most famous trial, November 19, 1945.
©2011 Harold Burson (P)2013 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not?
Not much depth of information about the trials or defendants. Interesting but I didn't learn much.Disappointed. OK book but short on detail.
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Interesting version of Nuremberg
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Radio broadcasts covering the trial
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Fascinating Perspective on Nuremberg Trials
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Would you listen to Report from Nuremberg again? Why?
I would to see if I'd missed anything.What was one of the most memorable moments of Report from Nuremberg?
Everything.Which scene was your favorite?
I can't pick one.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
The film of the holocaust they showed.Any additional comments?
None.The drama brought to life.
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Like I Was There
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"you are there" type
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What made the experience of listening to Report from Nuremberg the most enjoyable?
This audio book is well worth a listen for the colorful first person descriptions from the AFN reporter Harold Burson about the Nazi leadership and the tenor of the Nurember trial. In that courtroom Cpl. Burson literally had a front row seat to history, and he did a terrific job in doing what radio reporters should do - bring the audience into the courtroom by his vivid descriptions. The names of the defendants mean little when read in the history books, but he tried to separate them in character from the "colorful scoundrel" (Goering) to the dutiful officers (Keitel, Jodl) to the bureaucratic monsters (Sauckel, Seyss-Inquart).What did you like best about this story?
The frank description of Hermann Goering's takeover of the trial as he took the witness stand. I had heard after-the-fact criticism of Justice Jack's cross-examination, but Cpl. Burson confirmed it in his same-day commentary.Now there was radio!
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Where does Report from Nuremberg rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
It is a pretty good book particularly for its content: the tribunal that judged the 23 war criminals of the Nazi era. I was not familiar with the background and that is interestingWho was your favorite character and why?
There are no characters, unless you call the war criminals 'characters'. That would be too much honor for them.What does the narrators bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
The narrators read the transcripts of the radio transmissions of American Forces Radio of 1945 and 1946, and provide a very good feel for the mood and sentiments of the day. It is clear that there being a War Crimes Tribunal was not as likely as it might seem todayIf you were to make a film of this book, what would the tag line be?
This book is not good for a movie, but a documentary would be fine outlining the sentiments of the day: "kill those f*ing basterds!"Any additional comments?
The reading is good and the interview with an aged Harold Burson at the end is a fitting and welcome addition to the report. However, the 'report' stops after the trial of the first 3 to 5 criminals and does not return to the trial. I would have enjoyed the book more if it would have returned at the final stages of the trial with the sentences of the criminals and their arguments. That would have rounded it off. But maybe those radio transcripts were no longer available...The first war crimes tribunal as experienced then
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This book wasn’t for you, but who do you think might enjoy it more?
Only a ww2 war crimes fanatic.Would you recommend Report from Nuremberg to your friends? Why or why not?
No. Very little interesting info about the convicts.Would you listen to another book narrated by the narrators?
No.Any additional comments?
Huge hype that turned out to be a lame book.Don't waste a credit
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