This is what readers have previously been told about Eva Braun: that she was a cute, fashion-conscious, athletic, and vivacious 17-year-old salesgirl when she met Hitler in 1929. At that time, Hitler was a flabby little 40-year-old man with a comical mustache who wore the same baggy blue suit every day of the week. Hitler was unemployed, but he dreamed of entering politics; Eva had no interest in politics whatsoever. Even though the two of them had virtually nothing in common, they became romantically involved, according to previous biographies, while Eva was still living at home with her strict Catholic parents. Throughout the course of their relationship, Eva only saw Hitler on rare occasions. When Hitler was away, Eva passed the time by reading movie magazines, exercising, and holding parties for her friends at her house in Munich. Hitler had bought her the house in response to two feigned suicide attempts by Eva. While Eva was never allowed to appear in public with Hitler, Hitler openly enjoyed the company of dancers, opera singers, and actresses.
Previous biographers would have one believe that, after 16 years of being ignored by Hitler, Eva went to Berlin of her own free will to marry and then to commit suicide alongside Hitler in his underground bunker.Readers will agree that this cannot be the full story of Eva Braun. There must be more to it. Now, thanks to the author's 15 years of intensive research, we know that Eva Braun was the product of a broken home, that her father was an alcoholic, and that she suffered from depression and Mayer-Rokitansky Syndrome or "MRK," the congenital absence of a functioning vagina and uterus, a condition which affects one in every 4,000-5,000 women. Sixty-five years after Eva's death, this book finally sets the record straight on Eva Braun.