Mein Kampf /
Adolf Hitler ; translated by Ralph Manheim.
- Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1952.
- 694 p. ; 21 cm.
"A Mariner Book." Includes index.
Reckoning: In the house of my parents -- Years of study and suffering in Vienna -- General political considerations based on my Vienna period-- Munich -- World war -- War propaganda -- Revolution -- Beginning of my political activity -- 'German workers' party' -- Causes of the collapse -- Nation and race -- First period of development of the National Socialist German Workers' party -- National socialist movement: Philosophy and party -- State -- Subjects and citizens -- Personality and conception of the folkish state -- Philosophy and organization -- Struggle of the early period: the significance of the spoken word -- Struggle with the red front -- Strong man is mightiest alone -- Basic ideas regarding the meaning and organization of the SA -- Federalism as a mask -- Propaganda and organization -- Trade-union question -- German alliance policy after the war -- Eastern orientation or eastern policy -- Right of emergency defense.
Stands as Hilter's own stories of his life, his political philosophy, and his thwarted plans for world domination.