Definitely not a Jewish book but I do not think that anybody alive knows the answer to that question.
Mein Kampf was the book written by Adolf Hitler in 1925/26 so one could reasonably assume his own book would have been his favorite.
Actually, Hitler's favorite book was (according to the International White Supremacy Society, better known as Stormfront) The Riddle of the Jew's Success, by Theodor Fritsch.
He used to read Playboy magazine
Hitler dropped out of school at age 16.
The Elders of Zion
The only person who might have seen Hitler shoot himself was Eva Braun who, of course, took cyanide at the same time. The two were effectively in a suicide pact. Hitler and Eva retired to a living room next door to his study and Hitler gave orders that they were not to be disturbed. Some minutes later a shot was heard and Hitler's valet entered the room to find the couple dead sitting on a sofa. Hitler was slumped forward with a bullet wound to the temple and Eva had her legs drawn up possibly because of the spasms caused by taking cyanide.
Hitler's fathers job was a custom officer.
'Hial Hitler' means to all worship hitler.
Hitler did not have a daughter. Heidi was the name of the daughter in the book,"Hitler's Daughter", but I believe that Hitler did not have a daughter in real life.
Klara Hitler was the Mother of Adolf Hitler and Paula.When hitlers father died she took on taking roll as the supervisor of Adolf Hitler and his sister Paula.
No
No
Great Britain
He didn't.
yes he did! that's why he was successful in it
Vienna
evry one should be educted
He wanted to be an artist or an architect but was rejected by the Vienne art academy.
It's because we study how he mastered the power that is manipulation.
Jeremy Roberts wrote the Adolf Hitler biogrophy.
The coming of Hitler to power, and just when Adolf Hitler came to power ,he moved to Princeton, N.J., where he joined the Institute for Advanced Study.
Adolf Hitler was an Austrian-born German politician. He may also have had Jewish and African heritage, according to a DNA study done by Belgian researchers.