The Day We Had Hitler Home


The Day We Had Hitler Home is a 2000 novel by the Australian author Rodney Hall.

Synopsis

In 1919 a young German soldier, blinded by gas, joins the wrong queue of evacutees. He is also unable to speak and so cannot tell anyone his name, private first-class Adolf Hitler. As a result he mistakenly boards a steamer headed for Australia.

Awards and nominations

Critical reception

Joanna Giffiths in The Observer noted that the book "jerks the reader to attention by depositing Hitler into the plot, only to recede into opaque twists and obscuring quirkiness."

Publication history

After the novel's initial publication by Picador in Australia in 2000 it was then published as follows:
It was also translated into Portuguese and Spanish.