Out Now: Vienna’s Venture

Recently I started a new series called Adolf in AI, now the third volume is out on Kindle. This series documents the years between 1903 and 1907, which are marked the slow unraveling of a family, and the quiet birth of an obsession. His mother’s illness returned, creeping back into…

Recently I started a new series called Adolf in AI, now the third volume is out on Kindle.

This series documents the years between 1903 and 1907, which are marked the slow unraveling of a family, and the quiet birth of an obsession. His mother’s illness returned, creeping back into their lives like a shadow that refused to leave. The household, once alive with the rhythm of ordinary days, began to decay from within. Money grew scarce, tempers frayed, and every cough from her room seemed to echo the collapse of what little stability remained.

He turned to art as both refuge and rebellion. With every sketch, he tried to escape the weight of sickness and poverty, convinced that talent could lift him beyond the confines of his crumbling world. When he left for Vienna, it was with all the fragile hope of a young man certain that destiny had chosen him. The rejection from the Academy shattered that illusion in a single, polite letter.

This series documents Hitler’s life in Vienna in the format of an illustrated journal.

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