WorldCat lists 553 published books under this heading.
Novels • The 1962 short story
Genesis and Catastrophe: A True Story by
Roald Dahl portrays an unhappy husband in Austria in 1889 whose wife is about to give birth. The father is pessimistic about the child's survival as their previous three children have all died in infancy. Rebuked by the doctor for his gloominess, his confidence is boosted by his wife's conviction that their new baby, a boy, will survive. The father names his newborn son Adolf Hitler. • The 1968 book ''Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf - Gezeichnete Erinnerungen an eine Große Zeit
[Adolf Hitler's My Struggle - drawn memories of a big time
] by . is a satire of Mein Kampf'' • In the novel
Young Adolf (1978) by English author
Beryl Bainbridge, the 23-year-old Hitler travels to Liverpool to visit his English relatives. •
Ron Hansen's 1999
historical fiction novel ''Hitler's Niece'' parallels Hitler's rise to power in the 1920s and 1930s with his relationship with his niece (and secret mistress)
Geli Raubal. • In the novel
Hunters in the Snow (2014) by English author
D. M. Thomas, a young Hitler (going by the nom de guerre 'Wolf') becomes involved with
Anna Freud and her father
Sigmund whilst residing in Vienna. Hitler appears in many
alternate history novels. • In
Philip K. Dick's 1962
The Man in the High Castle, where the
Axis Powers won the Second World War, America has been conquered and carved up between the
Greater Germanic Reich and
Imperial Japan, Hitler, after being stricken by the later stages of
syphilis, was confined to a
lunatic asylum shortly after World War II, and his place taken by
Martin Bormann and, later,
Joseph Goebbels and possibly
Reinhard Heydrich.
The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, by Hawthorne Abendsen, the story within the story, where the Allies won the war, in this timeline the United Kingdom contributes more to the Allied war effort, leading to joint British and Russian forces capturing Berlin, Hitler is also present at this
Nuremberg trials and is eventually found guilty and executed for
crimes against humanity. • Similarly, in
Eric Norden's 1973
The Ultimate Solution Nazi Germany won the war and rules the world, but Hitler personally got little benefit of it. Having gone entirely mad, he is kept closely confined, constantly shouting at uncaring guards that he had been betrayed - while a double is taking his place in public ceremonies. • In
Nancy Kress'
And Wild for to Hold, time-travelers intervene to change the past. Rather than assassinate Hitler, the humane emissaries from the future kidnap him alive from the year 1932, and keep him captive under comfortable conditions, preventing his rise to power in Germany. • In
Norman Spinrad's 1972 alternate history novel
The Iron Dream, Hitler in the early 1920s stopped dabbling in politics, emigrated to America, learned English and became a well-known and respected science fiction pulp novelist - author of
Lord of the Swastika, the text of which provides the bulk of the book. • In the controversial 1981 novella
The Portage to San Cristobal of A.H. by
George Steiner Hitler survives the end of the war and escapes to the Amazon jungle, where he is found and tried by Nazi-hunters 30 years later. Hitler's defence is that since Israel owes its existence to the Holocaust, he is really the benefactor of the Jews. • In
Irving Wallace's
The Seventh Secret (1985), Hitler and
Eva Braun survive
World War II by having doubles (a comedian named Manfred Müller and his girlfriend) murdered in their place, staging the murder to look like suicide. • In
Ira Levin's 1976
The Boys from Brazil, Hitler conspired with
Josef Mengele to clone himself prior to his death. Using Hitler's blood, Mengele begins a project in the 1960s to clone several Hitlers and distribute the Hitler infants to families similar to that of the original. Mengele later attempts to recreate the sociological environment of Hitler's youth, beginning with killing the fathers of all the Hitler clones. Mengele's plan is to eventually create a second Hitler who will come of age in the 21st century and establish the Fourth Reich. • Forged journals of Hitler, known as the
Hitler Diaries, were published in West Germany by the magazine
Stern in 1983. • The 1995
Robert Ludlum novel
The Apocalypse Watch meets its climax with the destruction of a Fourth Reich set in the 1990s, and the discovery of an ancient Adolf Hitler controlling a massive multinational corporation. •
Robert Harris' 1992 novel
Fatherland is based on a fictional German victory in WWII and Hitler meeting with U.S. President
Joseph P. Kennedy during the 1960s. • In
The Plot Against America (2004),
Philip Roth envisions what life would have been like in the United States had
Charles Lindbergh defeated
Franklin D. Roosevelt and became president during the 1940s, allying America with Nazi Germany. • Hitler is also the main 'protagonist' in the German dark satire novel
Er ist wieder da ("Look Who's Back") by
Timur Vermes, published in 2012. Hitler is shown to somehow reawaken, alive again, in
Berlin of 2011 and, since no one believes him to really be Hitler, becomes a meme on YouTube as a Hitler impersonator. •
Lavie Tidhar's novel,
A Man Lies Dreaming (2014) features a thinly-disguised Hitler (going by the nom de guerre 'Wolf' – which Hitler used during the 1920s) as a down-at-heels private eye in a 1930s London, in a world where the communists, rather than the Nazis, came to power in Germany. •
Newt Gingrich and
William R. Forstchen's novel,
1945 (1995) Where the United States only went to war, and won against the
Empire of Japan, allowing Nazi Germany to force a peace treaty with the
Soviet Union, America has no interest in getting involved with the European conflict, even the
British Empire with a
German-dominated Europe at its doorstep, squander much of their resources on a
colonial war in the former
French Indochina, however when a meeting between Hitler and U.S. President Andrew Harrison goes bad, after the meeting in
Reykjavík,
Iceland, Hitler makes a plan to destroy the U.S. and U.K this involves, as part of the preparations, a beautiful German spy seduces and suborns the
White House Chief of Staff and makes him a key German spy, and
Erwin Rommel invading
Scotland. •
James Herbert's novel, ''
'48'' (1996) before committing suicide, Hitler orders launches a biological weapon in the shape of a
V-2 missile to wipe out all life on Earth. •
Stephen Fry's novel,
Making History
(1996) features two men, Michael Young and Professor Leo Zuckerman, who build a time machine, go back in time and put a permanent
male contraceptive pill in
Hitler's father's drink, making him
infertile, thus Hitler is never born, however when they return to the present they discover they got rid of Hitler only to replace him with someone far worse, Rudolf Gloder. •
Hans Alfredson's novel,
Attentatet i Pålsjö skog (1996) In 1941 Swedish Communists blow up a German train passing through Sweden, killing Eva Braun, leading Hitler to successfully invade Sweden, because of this
Operation Barbarossa is delayed by three weeks allowing Joseph Stalin to be better prepared, the allied
invasion of Normandy is in spring 1944 rather than June, in December that same year Hitler commits suicide, Sweden is liberated by joint British and Russian forces and the war ends a year earlier. •
Guy Walters'
The Leader (2003),
King Edward VIII never abdicates, marries
Wallis Simpson, leading to
Oswald Mosley winning the
1935 election, allying the United Kingdom with the
Axis powers, Mosley conspires with Hitler to join him in the Final Solution. • In
Katherine Applegate's series
Animorphs, Adolf Hitler makes an appearance in the third book of the spinoff series
Megamorphs as an alternate version of himself where he is but a mere driver for the French-German troops. He is killed by Tobias using Tobias' Hork-Bajir morph, where his throat is slit by the wrist blades of the Hork-Bajir. •
Harry Turtledove frequently uses alternate history in his novels, including Adolf Hitler. "
Uncle Alf" features Hitler as a Sergeant in the
Feldgendarmerie,
In the Presence of Mine Enemies has an axis victory and the Fuhrer is the most powerful man in the world. In
The War That Came Early Hitler is assassinated and the Nazi Government overthrown in a
Coup d'etat. The
Worldwar series (1993–2004) imagines an
alien invasion of Earth during
World War II. Hitler sends
Joachim von Ribbentrop to negotiate and armistice between the Axis and Allied powers, and remains Fuhrer until his death, he is succeeded by
Heinrich Himmler. •
Jo Walton's
Farthing in this alternative history
Rudolf Hess's flight to Scotland in May 1941 manages to successfully negotiate peace terms with the United Kingdom, mainly because the United States never gets involved with the conflict, this is because
Imperial Japan never attacks
Pearl Harbor, resulting in the British Empire pulling out of the war, and by 1949, Britain has also become a fascist dictatorship, the sequel ''
Ha'penny'' the main character Inspector Peter Carmichael, has to stop an attempt to kill Hitler as he comes to London as part of the two countries new friendship. • In
Philip Kerr's ''Hitler's Peace'' (2005) Hitler, realising he is going to lose the war, tries to negotiate peace with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Joseph Stalin, and
Winston Churchill. • In
Guy Saville's
The Afrika Reich (2011) the United Kingdom is defeated by Nazi Germany during the
Dunkirk Campaign,
Lord Halifax becomes Prime Minister and signs a
non-aggression pact with Germany ending the war. 1952 the two empires have carved up
Africa between themselves.
The Madagaskar Plan Hitler is deporting Jews as part of the
Madagascar Plan. • In
Len Deighton's
XPD A group of former SS officers attempt to seize power in
West Germany, in which they intend to publish some wartime documents about a secret meeting between Winston Churchill and Hitler in June 1940. • In
Mike Resnick's 1992
alternate history anthology Alternate Presidents. In the short story "A Fireside Chat" by Jack Nimersheim Hitler becomes
Chancellor of Germany earlier than in real life and in 1925 establishes an alliance with Franklin D. Roosevelt to maintain the balance of power. In the short story "Truth, Justice, and the American Way" by
Lawrence Watt-Evans In 1938, Hitler was overthrown and killed by a cabal of generals, and
Hermann Göring succeeded him as the second Führer, continuing to serve in that position until at least 1953. In the short story "Kingfish" by
Barry N. Malzberg,
Huey Long wins the presidential election of
1936 as an
independent. Long invites Hitler to Washington in 1938 and assassinates him via a bomb, leading to a war between the U.S. and Nazi Germany. • In
Patrick Sheane Duncan's
Dracula vs. Hitler (2016), a sequel to
Bram Stoker's
Dracula,
vampire hunter
Abraham Van Helsing awakens Dracula in 1941 to fight the Nazis in Romania.
Theatre '' puppet show in England Hitler made it onto the stage through
Japanese novelist
Yukio Mishima, who wrote a play called
My Friend Hitler (
Wagatomo Hitora), retelling the
Night of the Long Knives. Moreover, the
Hungarian writer
George Tabori wrote a comedy called
Mein Kampf which portrayed Hitler as a poor young man who enters Vienna, wanting to become an artist. Hitler appears as a minor character in
Stanley Eveling's
The Dead of Night, set above the
Führerbunker as the Russians are entering Berlin.
Dr Freud Will See You Now Mr Hitler (2008) was a radio drama by
Laurence Marks and
Maurice Gran presenting an imagined scenario in which
Sigmund Freud treats the young Hitler.
Toby Jones played Hitler.
Utpal Dutt's 1975
Bengali play Barricade is set in the time that Hitler is rising to power. In 2021, Gamma Ray Theatre launched their debut production "Ay Up, Hitler!" Written by Hampshire playwright David McCulloch, the play tells the untold "true" story of how Hitler and other high-ranking members of the
Third Reich, actually escaped Germany at the end of the war, and went into hiding in
Yorkshire. The play was praised for its 'outrageous satire' and was described as a 'riotous hour of innovative theatre.' It made its Edinburgh Fringe Debut in 2023, achieving a sell-out run. ==Motion pictures==