I was looking over my shelves the other day, and I noticed the following titles among the volumes therein kept:
My Life as a Soldier, by Karl Donitz
The First and the Last, by Adolf Galland
Inside the Third Reich, by Albert Speer
In case the names aren't familiar, they're the memoirs of a World War II German Admiral (and head of the U-Boat fleet), a Luftwaffe General with 104 kills against the Western Allies, and Minister of Armaments and War Production for the Nazis.
They are all books published after the Second World War, by soliders and government officials of the defeated nation. Seems somehow 'off' in my head., that they;d be allowed to publish their side, but that's a free press for you.
So here's my question: in a Nazi victory TL, would any of the defeated Allies have been allowed to publish similar books? Let us say it is a limited Nazi victory, like Fatherland, where they run the show in Europe up to the Urals, and the British are under their thumb.
I expect that, if publication were allowed, it'd have to be suitably censored and toned and so on, and plenty of top officials wouldn't be avaiable, due to having been executed.
So who might, theoretically publish, and what would it be like?