Roger Moorhouse


Roger Moorhouse is a British historian and author.

Education

He attended Berkhamsted School and the School of Slavonic and East European Studies of the University of London, graduating with an MA in history and politics in 1994.
Whilst a student, Moorhouse worked as a researcher for Professor Norman Davies, collaborating on many of the latter's best-known publications, including ', ' and Rising '44 and culminating in the publication in 2002 of a co-authored study of the history of the city of Wrocław entitled .

Main publications

In 2006, Moorhouse's first solo book, Killing Hitler, was published, which has since been translated a number of times. In a CNN news report of 3 September 2011, Killing Hitler was shown on Al-Saadi Gaddafi's desk after he had fled his office in the wake of the collapse of the Gaddafi regime in Libya. Reporter Nic Robertson suggested that Saadi Gaddafi had been reading the book prior to his flight.
His next book, Berlin at War, is a social history of Berlin during World War II, which was published in the summer of 2010. Writing in the Financial Times, Andrew Roberts commented that: "Few books on the war genuinely increase the sum of our collective knowledge of this exhaustively covered period, but this one does". "Berlin at War" was listed amongst the books of the year for 2010 by The Daily Telegraph, and American Spectator magazine, among others, and was shortlisted for the Hessell-Tiltman Prize for history.
In 2014, his The Devils' Alliance: Hitler's Pact with Stalin, 1939-1941 was published. Whilst praising the book for its "masterly" account of the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, historian Richard J. Evans took exception to the book's "unbalanced treatment" of the crimes of the Soviets over those of the Nazis, asserting that "for all its virtues this is a deeply problematic book".
Other reviewers of the book were more positive – the Wall Street Journal described it as "superb" and The Daily Telegraph listed it among its Books of the Year for 2014.
Moorhouse's most recent publication, First to Fight: The Polish War 1939, on the German and Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939, was widely acclaimed, named among books of the year for 2019 by BBC History Magazine and The Daily Telegraph, and shortlisted for the Duke of Wellington Medal for Military History 2020.

Summary

A fluent German speaker, Moorhouse is a specialist in modern German history, particularly on Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. In this capacity, he has written for The Times, The Independent on Sunday, and the Financial Times, and is a regular contributor to both the BBC History magazine and History Today. Increasingly, Moorhouse is concerning himself with modern Polish history, especially of the wartime period.
Moorhouse is a regular public speaker, and has appeared, among others, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival and the Bath Literature Festival. Since 2016, he has been a visiting professor at the College of Europe in Natolin near Warsaw. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

Other publications

Moorhouse is married with two children and lives in Tring, Hertfordshire.