I just finished Making Friends With Hitler by Ian Kershaw. It is about a British aristocrat, Lord Londonderry, who was forced out of the government in 1935 and had extensive contacts with Nazi leaders during the 30s, trying to head off war. He was not a fascist or Nazi himself, but he had been at the Somme and was terrified that a new war would mean the end of Western civilization and the triumph of Bolshevism.
He entertained Goring and Ribbentrop at his estate, and he never realized until it was way too late that the Nazis were not normal and could not be dealt with rationally. He was a prodigious letter writer and saved all of them, so he is an historian's dream. By the end of the war, he was disgraced, disillusioned, and a relic of a bygone time. Highly recommended.
I also read The Return of History and the End of Dreams by Robert Kagan. It is a long essay about the future of foreign relations, which the author sees will be divided between autocratic powers Russia and China and the democracies. His main thesis is that with the success of those countries, there is now a legitimate alternative to liberal democracy that will attract leaders who want to globalize without opening up their political systems and having their power threatened.