The mere mention of his name provokes a shudder: Hermann Göring. The second most powerful official within the Third Reich, head of the Luftwaffe, a fellow who fought alongside the Red Baron in the First World War, the architect of the Gestapo, signer of the Final Solution, the greatest art thief of the 20th century... And yet, Göring was significantly much more than just that: a morphine addict, devoted husband, patriot, coup plotter, dandy, businessman, murderer, hunter, jester, environmentalist, diplomat... "Hermann G." is, therefore, a fictionalized biography of the character, as anarchic as lucid; in it Ignacio del Valle displays a deep insight and profound reflection of National Socialism and the World War II. Because we are delving into an era, a worldview; even into an intense love story, that of our protagonist and Carin, which is nothing but a lifetime of love for a ghost. Just like the Iliad or the Peloponnesian War, this story will endure forever: the rise of Nazism, a new order of authoritarianism that, without any inhibitory restraint, is always pushing forward, and, once all conventional limits are surpassed, finds it extremely hard to set up new ones sufficiently glorious or monstrous, until crystallizing in the Nuremberg trials. In Göring's own words: "I have no conscience; Adolf Hitler is my conscience".