| Group | Where | Year | Source | Quote/ Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nazism | USA | 1993 | DeChance, John. MagicNet. New York: William Morrow and Co. (1993); pg. 45. | "'...Jones is all egalitarianism on the surface, all smarmy psychobabble and trendy cant, but scratch him with a feather and you reveal him for the tin Hitler he really is. He's horrendously bright, there's no doubt, but he's convinced that gives him some right to call the shots for us lesser mortals.' " |
| Nazism | USA | 1995 | Chalker, Jack L. The Cybernetic Walrus (Book One of The Wonderland Gambit). New York: Ballantine (1995); pg. 143. | "'...Gandhi always thought that Hitler could have been stopped entirely by nonviolent means. How anybody who'd massacre six million Jews for being Jews could be stopped by nonviolence is beyond me or any human nature but he had to believe that. The alternative was unthinkable to him...' " |
| Nazism | USA | 1995 | Chalker, Jack L. The Cybernetic Walrus (Book One of The Wonderland Gambit). New York: Ballantine (1995); pg. 222. | Pg. 222: "...even though both sides looked like a choice between being a peasant under Hitler or Stalin. "; Pg. 287: "...and a security staff that acted like children of the Nazi SS? " |
| Nazism | USA | 1995 | Hand, Elizabeth. Waking the Moon. New York: HarperPrism (1995); pg. 247. | Leni Riefenstahl |
| Nazism | USA | 1995 | Ing, Dean. The Big Lifters. New York: Tor (1988); pg. 46. | - |
| Nazism | USA | 1996 | King, Stephen (written as Richard Bachman). The Regulators. New York: Penguin Books (1996); pg. 103. | "As with the black-and-chrome van, there's something Nazi-ish about the uniform... " |
| Nazism | USA | 1996 | McDevitt, Jack. Ancient Shores. New York: HarperCollins (1996); pg. 14. | "The Lockheed Lightning gleamed in the late-afternoon sun. It was a living artifact, a part of the great effort against Hitler... "; Pg. 264: "...no Union to save, no Hitler to oppose. " |
| Nazism | USA | 1998 | Dick, Philip K. Time Out of Joint. New York: Random House (2002; c. 1959); pg. 92. | Pg. 92: "NO FASCISTS, NAZIS, COMMUNISTS, FALANGISTS, PERONISTS, FOLLOWERS OF HLINKA AND/OR BELA KUN ALLOWED "; Pg. 179: "'But could the Soviets afford such a prolonged attack? In World War Two, didn't the Nazis find that their economy wouldn't support the daily losses of heavy bombers incurred in their round-the-clock raids on London?' " [More.] |
| Nazism | USA | 1998 | Disch, Thomas M. The Dreams Our Stuff Is Made Of: How Science Fiction Conquered the World. New York: Simon & Schuster (2000; c. 1998); pg. 202. | "Turner Diaries by William Pierce... One early vignette (page 10) depicts the murders of a black liquor store clerk and two Jewish deli owners. Seven pages later, a neo-Nazi's death is avenged when the Cook County sheriff... " |
| Nazism | USA | 1999 | Hand, Elizabeth. Glimmering. New York: HarperCollins (1997); pg. 198. | "...quarks, drag queens, The King and I, Hitler, mustard gas, Thomas Mann, Jerry Mahoney, Victor Frankl " |
| Nazism | USA | 2000 | Budrys, Algis (ed.) L. Ron Hubbard Presents The Best of Writers of the Future. Los Angeles, CA: Bridge Publications (2000); pg. 104. | [Introduction to "Long Knives " by J. R. Dunn.] "Since his 1987 debut with Writers of the Future J. R. Dunn has published three novels: This Side of the Judgment (1994), Days of Cain (1997) and Full Tide of Night (1998. Days of Cain, the first serious SF novel to deal with the Holocaust, earned him the honor of neo-Nazi persecution. " |
| Nazism | USA | 2002 | Bear, Greg. Vitalis. New York: Ballantine (2002); pg. 180. | "'Look,' I said. 'I've read The Odessa File. I wish I had written it, this house would be a lot nicer... But I'm not much for Nazi conspiracies. I don't believe in trivializing real horror with skinhead fantasies.' ...'It's not Nazis and it's not just Communists. It's biologists, some of the smartest people in the world. Pioneers, in their way...' " |
| Nazism | USA | 2010 | Bury, Stephen. Interface. New York: Bantam (1994); pg. 71. | Pg. 71, 180, 219, 366. |
| Nazism | USA | 2010 | Bury, Stephen. Interface. New York: Bantam (1994); pg. 87. | "'...But we no longer trust charisma because Hitler used it to kill Jews and JFK used it to get laid and send us to Vietnam.' " |
| Nazism | USA | 2010 | Hickman, Tracy. The Immortals. New York: ROC/Penguin Books (1997; c. 1996); pg. 73. | "My God! the captain thought, sweat streaming down his face. The Nazis were bush league amateurs compared to this! " |
| Nazism | USA | 2010 | Stephenson, Neal. The Big U. New York: Random House (1984); pg. 92. | "After a week's worth of rumors that portrayed the Fire Marshall as a Nazi and a pervert, it was decreed that henceforth during fire drills the Ras would go door-to-door with their master keys... " |
| Nazism | USA | 2010 | Stephenson, Neal. The Big U. New York: Random House (1984); pg. 98. | "Finally out came the names of Martin Luther King, Jr., Marx, Gandhi, Che, Jesus Christ, Ronald Reagan, Hitler, S. S. Krupp, the KKK, Bob Avakian, Elijah Mohammed and Abraham Lincoln. " |
| Nazism | USA | 2015 | Sullivan, Tricia. Someone to Watch Over Me. New York: Bantam (1997); pg. 244. | "'Adrien Reyes, pursuing the Deep! It's like Flipper the dolphin going Nazi-hunting.' " |
| Nazism | USA | 2019 | Burton, Levar. Aftermath. New York: Warner Books (1997); pg. 62. | "During the war the groundswell of pent-up anger went on to manifest itself in a purging of all the hate-mongering institutions that the minority population had been subjected to for so many years. Klansmen, neo-Nazis and skinheads had been hunted down and systematically executed. Many were publicly hanged by angry mobs, just as blacks had once been hanged by white-robed assassins. " |
| Nazism | USA | 2024 | Clarke, Arthur C. & Mike McQuay. Richter 10. New York: Bantam (1996); pg. 46. | "She remembered that when the zones had first been created, her father had called them 'ghettoes,' a word that was chilling to the daughter of a Jew, openly discriminated against during her teenage years after the Masada Operation. But she'd been prepared for the discrimination. She'd grown up with terror that had emanated from her father, no matter how hard he tried to hide it. Germans had run the country from the time she was scarcely more than a toddler until she was almost a teenager, and, though they bent over backwards to disassociate themselves from their ancient Nazi past, the Germans nonetheless exhibited the kind of authoritarianism that made her father fear a concentration camp was being build around every corner. " |
| Nazism | USA | 2026 | Moffett, Judith. Time, Like an Ever-Rolling Stream. New York: St. Martin's Press (1992); pg. 233. | Pg. 233: "'...The Antichrist is supposed to rise up from among the people, like Hitler did--there's n way to read the Bible to make it sound like he come from outer space...' "; Pg. 322: "Bemis's goals were vile, but his techniques were extremely effective. Like Hitler, he'd been preaching against something... " |
| Nazism | USA | 2032 | Butler, Octavia. Parable of the Talents. New York: Seven Stories Press (1998); pg. 23. | "The Nazis wore the swastika, which is a kind of cross... " |
| Nazism | USA | 2077 | Anthony, Piers. God of Tarot. New York: Berkley (1982; c. 1977); pg. 57. | "He looked about nervously for nozzles that might admit poisonous gas. The Jews in Nazi Germany, half a century or so ago; they had been promised relief... " |
| Nazism | USA - South | 1990 | Dick, Philip K. The Man in the High Castle. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons (1962); pg. 14. | "Plans roamed his mind as he lay in bed gazing up at the ancient light fixture in the ceiling. He could for instance slip across into the Rocky Mountain States. But it was loosely banded to the PSA [Pacific States of America], and might extradite him. What about the South? His body recoiled. Ugh. Not that. As a white man he would have plenty of place, in fact more than he had here in the PSA. But . . . he did not want that kind of place. And, worse, the South had a cat's cradle of ties, economic, ideological, and god knew what, with the Reich. And Frank Frink was a Jew. "; Pg. 17: "...if I left Japanese-controlled land and showed up in the South or in Europe--anywhere in the Reich. " [Nazism is mentioned frequently in book, as the book is about an alternatve history in which the U.S. lost World War II. Most refs. not in DB.] |
| Nazism | USSR | 1947 | Turtledove, Harry. "The Phantom Tolbukhin " in Alternate Generals (Harry Turtledove, ed.) New York: Baen (1998); pg. 115. | Pg. 115: "'I serve the Soviet Union!' he said, as if he were a raw recruit rather than a veteran of years of struggle against the Hitlerites... 'Sure as the devil's grandmother, the Phantom will make the Nazis pay. "; Pg. 117: "'General Tolbukhin not only sends us into battle against the Hitlerite oppressors and bandits, he leads us to battle against them. Let us cheer the Comrade General!'... Most of the men were veterans of many fights against the Nazis. " [Many other refs. throughout story, not in DB. Nazis are the main enemy group in this story about Russian military.] |
| Nazism | Utah | 1991 | Wolverton, Dave. "Wheatfields Beyond " in Washed by a Wave of Wind (M. Shayne Bell, ed.). Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books (1993); pg. 1. | "In the mornings Tana worked as a pretrial consultant for the Utah State Attorney General's Office, sorting men and women the way another person might sort good pea pods into one pile, culls into another: 'This juvenile car thief needs dug therapy... and the neo-Nazi in the corner is competent to stand trial for capital homicide.' " |
| Nazism | Vermont | 1971 | O'Neil, Dennis (from an idea by Berni Wrightson with an assist from Harlan Ellison). "Night of the Reaper " in Batman in the Seventies, (Michael Wright, ed.) New York: DC Comics (1999; story first pub. in Batman #237, December 1971); pg. 49. | Batman: "Robin, meet Doctor Gruener! He's the reason I'm here! "; Dr. Gruener: "Ja, is true! You see, young man, I was once an inmate of a Nazi concentration camp! Zis camp was run by Colonel Kurt Schloss! "; Robin: "I've heard of him... The one they called The Butcher! "; Dr. Gruener: "Ja, is good name, too! Schloss loved to humiliate, torture . . . . and kill! A week ago, I happen to be in costume shop buying outfit for my daughter's birthday . . . and I see Schloss! " [Many more refs., not in DB. This story is about Jewish Holocaust survivor Dr. Gruener's plans to get revenge on the Nazi leader, Kurt Schloss.] |
| Nazism | Vermont | 1971 | O'Neil, Dennis (from an idea by Berni Wrightson with an assist from Harlan Ellison). "Night of the Reaper " in Batman in the Seventies, (Michael Wright, ed.) New York: DC Comics (1999; story first pub. in Batman #237, December 1971); pg. 55. | [1] [Batman has snuck up behind a Nazi on the roof of a mansion, grabbed the man, and holds him over the precipice] Batman: "Listen to me, Nazi . . . I give you a choice! You can talk or . . . "; unnamed Nazi man: "I talk! . . . I TALK! "; Batman: "I want to know the contents of the message you were sending to your friends in the woods! "; unnamed Nazi man: "We seek revenge on Colonel Schloss for spending Nazi Party treasures! We observe him arriving in yellow automobile . . . I inform my friend that revenge is complete! We put bomb in automobile . . . "; Narration: "The whirr of engine interrupts the Nazi's recital! Instantly, The Batman whirls, his hands already darting toward the silken rope in his belt . . . " |
| Nazism | Vermont | 1971 | O'Neil, Dennis (from an idea by Berni Wrightson with an assist from Harlan Ellison). "Night of the Reaper " in Batman in the Seventies, (Michael Wright, ed.) New York: DC Comics (1999; story first pub. in Batman #237, December 1971); pg. 55. | [2] Pg. 56: [Batman swings on his rope, trying to reach the yellow car below] Batman: "Schloss! Get out of there! RUN . . . ! " [The car explodes, killing the Nazi named Schloss. Batman lands on the ground.]; Pg. 57: Batman [thinking]: "He's finally . . . paid! "; Robin: "Batman . . . You okay? "; Batman: "Oh, sure! Just swell . . . Great! Three men slain . . . including an innocent bystander whose only fault was wearing my costume! You tell his widow . . . his orphans . . . just exactly how great I am! "; Robin: "It wasn't your fault! Anyway, the case is closed . . . "; Batman: "Don't be stupid, kid! Sure, the Nazis booby-trapped Schloss . . . But they had no reason to murder the man dressed a me... " |
| Nazism | Vermont | 1971 | O'Neil, Dennis (from an idea by Berni Wrightson with an assist from Harlan Ellison). "Night of the Reaper " in Batman in the Seventies, (Michael Wright, ed.) New York: DC Comics (1999; story first pub. in Batman #237, December 1971); pg. 58. | [1] [Batman confronts Dr. Gruener, the Jewish doctor who has largely completed his plan to have vengeance against Colonel Schloss, the Nazi who led the concentration camp that Gruener had been imprisoned in during World War II] Batman: "You can't run any farther! You can't escape . . . from me--or yourself! "; Dr. Gruener [dressed as Grim Reaper]: "Then you have guessed my identity? " |
| Nazism | Vermont | 1971 | O'Neil, Dennis (from an idea by Berni Wrightson with an assist from Harlan Ellison). "Night of the Reaper " in Batman in the Seventies, (Michael Wright, ed.) New York: DC Comics (1999; story first pub. in Batman #237, December 1971); pg. 59. | [2] Batman: "Of course! Those Nazis chasing Schloss--they couldn't have known I was around--unless you told them! "; Dr. Gruener: "And have you also guessed why I told them? "; Batman: "Yes! After you informed on Schloss, you had a change of heart . . . you decided on personal vengeance! "; Dr. Gruener: "And who has better right? My father and mother, my sisters . . . I saw the Butcher [Schloss] empty his pistol into their bodies. I heard him laugh as their blood poured onto the filth of the camp! Who are you to judge me? You--who hae not witnessed the horror of those days! Still, I awake screaming! I feel the agonies . . . smell the smoke of the execution chamber . . . listen to the helpless crying of babies. " [Picture shows Dr. Gruener's memories: a Nazi colonel with a swastika medal on his hat, a hand holding a whip, and 10 emaciated Jews being forced to march, heads bowed in misery.] |
| Nazism | Vermont | 1997 | Lobdell, Scott & Elliot S. Maggin. Generation X. New York: Berkley (1997); pg. 268. | "Everett found himself in a brawl with a collection of neo-Nazis from Vermont and, in the course of sending them on their way... " |
| Nazism | Vietnam | 1972 | Wolfe, Bernard. "Monitored Dreams and Strategic Cremations " in Again, Dangerous Visions (Harlan Ellison, ed.) Garden City, NY: Doubleday (1972); pg. 298. | "'You're a smart enough strategist not to start offensives on two fronts at once. Remember Hitler.' " |
| Nazism | Vietnam | 1994 | Milan, Victor. "My Sweet Lord " in Wild Cards: Book II of a New Cycle: Marked Cards (George R. R. Martin, ed.) New York: Baen (1994); pg. 91. | "To hang onto their power in the face of the successful revolt of the South and increasing dissatisfaction in the North, the aging rulers of the rump Socialist Republic of Vietnam had resorted to increasingly savage repression. 'They're like Nazis up there.' 'Hitler was a socialist, after all. And Nguyen probably doesn't take their kill-the-wild-cards all that personally...' " |
| Nazism | Washington, D.C. | 1942 | Simmons, Dan. The Crook Factory. New York: Avon Books (1999); pg. 14. | [FBI] Pg. 14: "The truth was that Tom shared confidences. 'Caught any Nazi or Jap spies?' I said. Tom chuckled... 'Heck, Joe, we've been so busy being sicced onto our own people, we don't have time for Nazis or Japs.' "; Pg. 15: "'I know, I know,' I said. The Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor and Adolf Hitler was the most dangerous man in the world, but Mr. Hoover was famous for his desire to deal with the Communist menace first. " [Many other refs., not in DB. Novel takes place during World War II.] |
| Nazism | Washington, D.C. | 1993 | Sawyer, Robert J. Frameshift. New York: Tor (1998; c. 1997); pg. 49. | [Watching a video of the movie Judgment at Nuremberg] "The case against Janning hinged on the matter of Feldenstein, a Jew he'd ordered executed on trumped-up indecency charges, Janning demanded the right to speak, over the objection of his own lawyer. When he took the stand, Avi felt his stomach knotting. Janning told of the lies Hitler had sold German society: ' 'There are devils among us: Communists, liberals, Jews, Gypsies. Once these devils will be destroyed, your misery will be destroyed.' ' Janning shook his head slightly. 'it was the old, old story of the sacrificial lamb.' " [More, pg. 50-52, elsewhere.] |
| Nazism | Washington, D.C. | 1999 | Anderson, Jack. Millennium. New York: Tor (1994); pg. 167. | "'There are people with charisma,' Brickell said, 'and if their motivation is powerful enough, people will obey. Hitler had the German economy working for him...' " |
| Nazism | Washington: Seattle | 1993 | Busby, F. M. The Singularity Project. New York: Tor (1993); pg. 160. | "'You know what that tin Hitler told me? To leave here when you do, and drive way down to Southcenter Parkway, and waste my time watching a sappy movie.' " |
| Nazism | world | 1896 | Matheson, Richard. Bid Time Return. New York: Viking Press (1975); pg. 161. | "Einstein is a teen-ager in Switzerland. Lenin is a young lawyer, his revolutionary days far ahead of him. Franklin Roosevelt is a Groton student, Gandhi a lawyer in Africa, Picasso a youth. Hitler and De Gaulle schoolboys. " |
| Nazism | world | 1925 | Sanders, William. "Billy Mitchell's Overt Act " in Alternate Generals (Harry Turtledove, ed.) New York: Baen (1998); pg. 173. | Hitler |
| Nazism | world | 1938 | Williams, Walter Jon "Witness " in Wild Cards (George R. R. Martin, ed.) New York: Bantam (1986); pg. 103. | "When the Nazi-Soviet pact was signed, Earl resigned from the CP [Communist Party] in anger. Accommodation with the fascists was not his style. " |
| Nazism | world | 1939 | Dick, Philip K. Ubik. Garden City, NY: Doubleday (1969); pg. 138. | "'What about Russia?' Mr. Bliss was asking. 'In the war, I mean. Do we wipe out those Reds? Can you see that far ahead?' Joe said, 'Russia will fight on the same side as the U.S.A.'... 'On our side?' Bliss sputtered. 'The Communists? That's impossible; they've got that pact with the Nazis.' Germany will violate that pact,' Joe said... Bliss said, 'Those Communists are the real menace, not the Germans. Take the treatment of the Jews. You know who makes a lot out of that? Jews in this country, a lot of them not citizens but refugees living on public welfare. I think the Nazis certainly have been a little extreme in some of the things they've done to the Jews, but basically there's been the Jewish question for a long time, and something, although maybe not so vile as those concentration camps, had to be done about it. We have a similar problem here in the United States, both with Jews and the niggers. Eventually we're going to have to do something about both.' " |
| Nazism | world | 1939 | Dick, Philip K. Ubik. Garden City, NY: Doubleday (1969); pg. 140. | "This is a world that lives in terms of William Jennings Bryan's oratory; the Scopes 'Monkey Trial' is a vivid reality here. He thought, There is no way we can adapt to their viewpoint, their moral, political, sociological environment. To them we're professional agitators, more alien than the Nazis, probably more of a menace than the Communist Party.' " |
| Nazism | world | 1939 | Gibson, William. Virtual Light. New York: Bantam (1993); pg. 190. | "...sort of like the special effect at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark, that part where those angels or whatever they were came swirling out of that box and got all over those Nazis. " |
| Nazism | world | 1939 | Waldrop, Howard. "Thirty Minutes Over Broadway! " in Wild Cards (George R. R. Martin, ed.) New York: Bantam (1986); pg. 13. | "'...Back in '39...' 'Silverberg's the one the Nazis bumped off? The guy who made the jet?' 'Yep. Years ahead of everybody, but weird. I put together the plane for him, Bobby and I built it by hand. But Silverberg made the jets--damnedest engines you ever saw. The Nazis and Italians, and Whittle over in England, had started theirs. But the Germans found out something was happening here.' ...'...Silverberg put up such a fight the Nazis killed him...' " [Other refs., not in DB.] |
| Nazism | world | 1939 | Waldrop, Howard. "Thirty Minutes Over Broadway! " in Wild Cards (George R. R. Martin, ed.) New York: Bantam (1986); pg. 17. | Pg. 17: "Then he had gone away, to work at the airfield, then to fight with the Brits against Hitler. "; Pg. 33: "Before coming home, the last two movies he'd seen... had been a cheesy double bill. That Nazty Nuisance, a United Artists film made in '43, with bobby Watson as Hitler... " |
| Nazism | world | 1940 | Burton, Levar. Aftermath. New York: Warner Books (1997); pg. 34. | "As the elders at Third Mesa pondered over the meaning of the tablet's words, an insane corporal rose to become a dictator in Germany. His heart black with evil, he took an ancient religious symbol used by Native Americans and their brothers far to the east--reversed and tilted it--and called it the swastika. " |
| Nazism | world | 1940 | Turtledove, Harry. Worldwar: In the Balance. New York: Ballantine (1994) | [Extensive refs., not in DB. Adolf Hitler himself is a significant character in novel.] |
| Nazism | world | 1941 | Turtledove, Harry. Worldwar: Tilting the Balance. New York: Del Rey (1995); pg. 14. | "'Isn't it a hell of a thing? A year ago, Mussolini was the enemy with a capital E because he was buddies with Hitler. Now he's a hero because the krauts got him away from the Lizards. And Hitler's not such a bad guy any more, since the Germans are still fighting hard. Just because you're fighting the Lizards doesn't make you a good guy in my book. Was Joe Stalin a good guy just on account of he was fighting the Nazis? People say so, yeah, but they can't make me believe it...' " [Many other refs. to Nazis and Hitler, not in DB.] |
| Nazism | world | 1942 | Anderson, Poul. The Boat of a Million Years. New York: Tor (1989); pg. 272. | "Well, everybody got stupid now and then, especially in war. This time Soviet intelligence had spied a Nazi blindness. " |
| Nazism | world | 1942 | Turtledove, Harry. Worldwar: Upsetting the Balance. New York: Del Rey (1996); pg. 58. | Pg. 58: "Georg Schultz was a genius with a spanner in his hands, but he was also a dedicated Nazi, a panzer gunner who'd attached himself to the airbase staff when they were still operating out of the Ukraine. "; Pg. 59: "The Nazis thought of themselves as the lords of creation and of their Slavic neighbors as subhuman, certainly incapable of a scientific feat like the explosive-metal bomb. " [Extensive refs., not in DB.] |
| Nazism | world | 1944 | Allred, Lee. "The Greatest Danger " in Drakas! (S. M. Sterling, ed.) New York: Baen (2000); pg. 189. | "'We're some Frankenstein monster the limeys created for themselves. They hate us nearly as much as the Nazis.' 'So.' Verwoerd faced the security man. 'Britain would be as likely to cooperate with us as they would the Nazis?' " |
| Nazism | world | 1944 | Anderson, Jack. Millennium. New York: Tor (1994); pg. 232. | "'...During your youth, I believe there was an evil ruler who conducted genocide against the Jewish people. But because of the enormity, the magnitude, and the horror of it, the world refused to believe. And so the truth grew, unchecked, until it became the holocaust.' " |
| Nazism | world | 1944 | Baxter, Stephen. Voyage. New York: HarperCollins (1996); pg. 63. | "...1944... learned the visions of the Reich's military planners. It was well-known among the workers within the Mittelwerk that Hitler had ordered production of... " [Dana, one of the main characters is a survivor of a Nazi concentration camp. But Nazism is mentioned hardly at all: the novel focuses on contemporary events.] |
| Nazism | world | 1944 | Maggin, Elliot S. Kingdom Come. New York: Time Warner (1998); pg. 144. | "As the Nazi Chief of Field Counter-intelligence in the Second World War, he'd nearly insinuated himself into the position of American Secretary of War until Alan Scott, the first Earth-based Green Lantern, upended his plan. " |
| Nazism | world | 1944 | Morrow, James. Towing Jehovah. New York: Harcourt Brace & Co. (1994); pg. 44. | "As a boy, Neil had never tired of hearing Grandfather Moshe recount his maritime adventures... playing cat-and-mouse with Nazi submarines in the North Atlantic... "; Pg. 46: "...he wouldn't be dodging any Nazi subs, but at leat he had a job. " |
| Nazism | world | 1945 | Bova, Ben. Moonwar. New York: Avon Books (1998); pg. 20. | "He muted the sound and scrolled slowly through it, searching for the terse statement that Eisenhower had written back to Washington when the Nazis surrendered. His aides had wanted a long, flowery announcement filled with stirring phrases and fulsome praise for the various generals. " |
| Nazism | world | 1945 | Clarke, Arthur C. The Fountains of Paradise. New York: Ballantine (1980; 1st ed. 1978); pg. 158. | "The devastation created by such mad geniuses (there seems no other good term for them) can be world-wide, as I the case of A. Hitler (1889-1945) " |
| Nazism | world | 1945 | Lobdell, Scott & Elliot S. Maggin. Generation X. New York: Berkley (1997); pg. 258. | "Now that the prey was driven into an insane rage, the demon was able to feed permanently, increasing his power. Once, D'Spayre had taken unto himself the fury of a single man--a tyrant who had seduced a nation and murdered millions and had felt exultation rather than remorse. The taste of the man's madness had made D'Spayre larger, stronger, given him a perceptible rush for decades that was so strong he had hibernated for most of that time, assimilating the power. He thirsted for more. " [Refers to Hitler.] |
| Nazism | world | 1945 | Powers, Tim. Earthquake Weather. New York: Tor (1997); pg. 136. | "...the family's most prized vin de bouche, the old 1945 vintage, picked from vines that had gone unpruned during the Nazi occupation... " |
| Nazism | world | 1945 | Watson, Ian. The Flies of Memory. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers (1990); pg. 187. | "...Valeri was explaining some of the secret history of the Great patriotic War against the Nazis to Martine... " |
| Nazism | world | 1946 | Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World. New York: HarperCollins (1999; c. 1932, 1946); pg. xii. | [Forward by Huxley.] "The nationalistic radicals had their way, with the consequences that we all know--Bolshevism, Fascism, inflation, depression, Hitler, the Second World War... " |
| Nazism | world | 1947 | Bear, Greg. Dinosaur Summer. New York: Time Warner (1998); pg. 50. | "Peter scanned the photographs sleepily and spotted a tight row of framed glossies: Gluck standing beside Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a second picture with him and Josef Stalin, and a third with Adolph Hitler. " |
| Nazism | world | 1949 | Sargent, Pamela "Gather Blue Roses " (published 1972) in The Norton Book of Science Fiction (Ursula K. Le Guin & Brian Atterbery, editors). New York: W. W. Norton & Co. (1993); pg. 250. | [Year is estimated.] "And I thank God I had been born in 1949; there was no chance that I was the daughter of a Nazi rape. " |
| Nazism | world | 1950 | Barton, William. "Home is Where the Heart Is " in Drakas! (S. M. Sterling, ed.) New York: Baen (2000); pg. 231. | "I wonder. What if Hitler hadn't hated the Jews? What if they'd given us [Germans] the bomb first? Imagine that. Britain. Russia. America. Ours. Maybe even these Draka. " |