Review by Choice Review
This often moving book is a work of serious scholarship illuminated by skillful use of many oral history interviews expressly compiled over more than a quarter century for the production of a series of masterful BBC documentaries about the Nazi era, WW II, and the Holocaust. The book is accessibly organized, focusing on the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis and the evolution of the racist anti-Semitic policies, reflecting the ideology of hate that provided the fertile soil in which anti-Jewish prejudice and discrimination became persecution and ultimately metastasized into the network of concentration camps, ghettos, mobile killing units, and the several designated death camps. Rees (BBC TV) adroitly uses quotations from perpetrators, bystanders, and surviving Jews and others to illustrate and illuminate the atrocious facts of the Holocaust. His analysis and explanations are not facile, but rooted in a broader context. Rees focuses on the variety and cost of decisions made by individuals and the very real limits on survival, escape, or armed resistance. The book sweeps across Europe, outlining the variety of conditions in countries controlled by Nazis, allied with Nazis, or carefully neutral. There are numerous useful maps and photographs. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. --Robert Moses Shapiro, Brooklyn College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
Historian Rees (former head of BBC TV History Programmes; Auschwitz: A New History) combines thorough scholarship of the Nazi era with his own vast archive of interviews with survivors, perpetrators, and bystanders to create a comprehensive, chilling, and readable history of the Holocaust. As the Third Reich rose and conquered European countries, methods of solving the "Jewish problem" evolved. Extermination of the Jews remained a primary Nazi battlefront even as loss to the Allies was imminent. Exploring the processes and choices that resulted in mass murder, Rees convincingly shows that although Nazi ideology was based on many twisted and hateful racial theories, Jews were especially targeted for eradication. Similar to Martin Gilbert's The Holocaust, survivor testimony is compelling, especially since it is shadowed by the inability of millions of victims to speak for themselves. The Holocaust was a horrible crime against humanity that sadly continues to be denied and perpetrated in different forms around the world. VERDICT Rees's ability to weave parallel global and personal histories makes this an outstanding, necessary, and timely book that should engage all readers of high school age or above.-Laurie Unger Skinner, Coll. of Lake Cty., Waukegan, IL © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A magnificent new history that tracks the gradual evolution of the Final Solution.In this orderly, horrifying study, former BBC creative director Rees (Hitler's Charisma: Leading Millions into the Abyss, 2013, etc.) emphasizes that the creation and implementation of gas chambers in Nazi concentration camps did not occur overnight as a solution to the "Jewish problem." Instead, the Nazi resolution to annihilate the Jewish population developed after a long process of ideological propaganda emerging from the top of the Nazi leadershipHitler was making anti-Semitic declarations as early as 1919and led to the trial-and-error installation of killing methods, beginning with the experimental gassing of disabled people in early 1940. Rees moves through these stages chronologically, building the "origins of hate" through the early Christian world and culminating in the "eugenics" movement of the turn of the 20th century. At the same time, the author warns against drawing "a straight line from the pre-First World War hatreds of the Jews to the Third Reich and the Holocaust." Other factors compounding the toxic mix began to convince the German public that the Jews were an "enemy" and to blame for the loss of the war, the communist uprising, and the Weimar government and misery of hyperinflation. The early chapters, which delineate the conditions in which Nazism took root among a vulnerable people (beaten down by social and economic conditions), are especially instructive and chilling. The consolidation of Nazi power moved from public humiliation of Jews to the Nuremberg Laws, while political empire-building via the Anschluss resulted in an efficient "conveyor belt" of persecution and expulsion by Heinrich Himmler's SS. The Nazi invasion of Poland in September 1939 inaugurated the "racial war" Hitler had prophesied, leading to more pragmatic solutions to "containing" the Jews, from ghettos to deportation to mass murder. Over the course of this increasingly grim narrative, Rees employs first-person accountsfrom interviews he conducted during the past 25 yearsto render palpable senses of humanity and context. A thorough, concise, evenhanded work, essential for libraries and schools. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.