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THE SUNDAY TIMES TOP 10 BESTSELLER AND THE FIRST AUTHORITATIVE ACCOUNT FOR 30 YEARS.'By far the clearest book ever written about the Holocaust, and also the best at explaining its origins and grotesque mentality, as well as its chaotic development'
Antony Beevor'
Groundbreaking. You might have thought that we know everything there is to know about the Holocaust but this book proves there is much more'
Andrew Roberts, Mail on SundayTwo fundamental questions about the Holocaust must be answered:How did it happen? And why?More completely than any other single work of history yet published, Laurence Rees's Holocaust definitively answers them.'With
The Holocaust Rees has set himself the task of writing
an accessible chronological account of the murder of six million Jews in conditions of scarcely imaginable horror. He's done it excellently. There is no shortage of books on the Holocaust but Rees's stands out as a readable and authoritative exposition of how and why it happened, and the barbarous methods by which it was pursued. The amount of ground it covers in 500 pages is
remarkable -
from the anti-Semitism of popular German literature of the 19th century to Hitler's suicide and the surrender of his regime. It's
excellently written and skilfully interweaves narrative history, sound interpretation and the recollections (through interviews, listed in the notes as "previously unpublished testimony") of survivors. Rees provides
an exemplary account of how the greatest crime in modern history came about'
The Times'Rees has distilled
25 years of research into this compelling study,
the finest single-volume account of the Holocaust. It is not a book for the faint-hearted. Some of the first-hand testimony is both
shocking and heart-rending. Yet it has important things to say about human nature - what our species is capable of doing if not prevented by civilized laws - and
demands to be read' Saul David,
Telegraph'Anyone wanting a
compelling, highly readable explanation of how and why the Holocaust happened,
drawing on recent scholarship and impressively incorporating
moving and harrowing interviews need look no further than Laurence Rees's
brilliant book' Professor Ian Kershaw, bestselling author of
Hitler
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