Review by Booklist Review
For several decades after the defeat of Nazi Germany, former concentration-camp doctor Josef Mengele managed to evade discovery in South America. By the time his whereabouts were discovered in 1985, he had been dead for several years, his corpse buried under a false name. Hiding Mengele tells the story of the people who aided his four-decade flight from justice. Brazilian journalist Anton had a unique connection to this case--one of those who helped Mengele escape justice was her own, beloved primary-school teacher. Her early attempts to get answers from "Tante Lisolette" were unsettling and triggered a long search for all the information she could find about a shadowy network of German nationals who protected Mengele and other wanted war criminals. Anton's research is impressive, and the book provides background on Mengele's life, suggesting how he became the sadistic tormentor of thousands. The question of why people protected him will haunt the reader.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
Brazilian journalist Anton debuts with an investigation into the network that sheltered Nazi doctor Josef Mengele in South America (the majority of the time in Brazil) until his death in 1979. Anton begins her account with the personal--a memory of her kindergarten teacher, Liselotte Bossert, who was arrested at work for the role she played in protecting the notorious war criminal. As an adult, Anton went on to unearth information about the well-coordinated community of expatriate Europeans in Brazil who endeavored to keep Mengele from justice. Anton supplies horrific details of Mengele's experiments, gleaned from Holocaust survivors. She employs interviews, news coverage, and court transcripts to reveal the network of connections, both in South America and abroad, who arranged for sanctuary, falsified documents, and ensured Mengele's financial security. Mengele's correspondence, diaries, and interviews provide an unsettling glimpse into his relatively comfortable postwar life and lack of remorse. Narrator Taylor Harvey offers a performance that is well paced, precise, and somberly engaging. Harvey's pronunciation of German, Spanish, and Portuguese is especially pleasing and accurate, and her empathetic storytelling makes an impact. VERDICT A sensitively presented, unputdownable account of the people who helped make a "tropical Bavaria" for a criminal whose cruelty knew no bounds.--Scott DiMarco
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A Brazilian journalist investigates the network that sheltered Auschwitz's "Angel of Death" until his death in 1979. Anton opens with Mengele's last day in 1979, a trip to the Brazilian seaside with the Austrian family that harbored his secret. It ended in his drowning and subsequent burial under the name Wolfgang Gerhard, one of the multiple false names he used after leaving postwar Germany for sanctuary in South America. Before this, he was a doctor at Auschwitz who oversaw the "selection" of prisoners to be sent to the gas chambers and who performed bizarre experiments, many on twins. Writes Anton: "For Mengele, Auschwitz was a great deposit of human material to be used in his private research." The author was haunted by his total amorality, "even more so knowing that, when hiding from justice, he received protection from my childhood teacher," who abruptly vanished from Anton's primary school in 1985 when her complicity was uncovered. Years later, Anton began to investigate how Mengele could have stayed hidden for so long. Her survey of his Auschwitz career is valuable for keeping fresh the collective Holocaust memory but breaks no new ground. The contrast of these activities with his postwar life recalls Hannah Arendt; it's hard to imagine anything much more banal (albeit creepy) than the image of a cranky old man who watches the Brazilian soap operaThe Slave Isaura "for the pleasure of seeing enslaved people mistreated." Some of the abettors who took considerable risks to hide him were motivated by ideology, others by money; the Mengele family owned a successful business in Bavaria and supported him for decades. Anton's disgust at the relative comfort Mengele enjoyed while his surviving victims suffered is plain. To construct her picture of his years in hiding, she draws on personal interviews, police records, and Mengele's copious letters. The last reveal no sense of unease or remorse, perhaps the most unsettling element of all. A provocative contribution to the literature of the Holocaust. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.