Recounts how, sixteen years after the end of World War II, a team of undercover Israeli agents captured the Nazi war criminal, Adolf Eichmann, in a remote area of Argentina and brought him to trial in Israel for crimes committed during the Holocaust.
A thrilling spy mission, a moving Holocaust story, and a first-class work of narrative nonfiction.
“I suppose you want to know in this way if my thoughts and habits are normal,” he told Gilbert on another occasion. He then provided his own answer: “I am entirely normal. Even while I was doing this extermination work, I led a normal ...
Focuses on the Nazi hunters Simon Wiesenthal, the Klarsfelds, Edgar Bronfman, Elan Steinberg, Israel Singer of the World Jewish Congress, Rabbi Marvin Hier, Neal Sher, and the Justice Department's Office...
Based on groundbreaking new information and featuring never-before-published surveillance photographs, a narrative of the pursuit and capture of Adolf Eichmann recounts how the Nazi managed to slip out of the country and build a new life in ...
According to Rudolf Reder, one of only two men to survive the camp, the orchestra at Belzec consisted of six musicians who usually played in the area between the gas chambers and the burial pits. The description of the camp memorial in ...
Already acclaimed in England as "first-rate" (The Sunday Times); “a model of meticulous, courageous and path-breaking scholarship"(Literary Review); and "absorbing and thoroughly gripping… deserves a lasting place among histories of the ...
In this New York Times bestseller, once-secret government records and interviews tell the full story of the thousands of Nazis—from concentration camp guards to high-level officers in the Third Reich—who came to the United States after ...
In 1952, influential newspaper columnist Drew Pearson wrote an article charging that one of the German medical scientists brought to Randolph Air Force Base outside San Antonio had approved “some of the ghastly medical experiments which ...
Unable to distinguish allies from enemies, Aaron will ultimately have to discover just how far he is prepared to go to render justice. “With his remarkable emotional precision and mastery of tone” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review), ...
Richard Marillier, Vercors 1943–1944: Le malentendu permanent (Clamecy: Armançon, 2003), 114-5. Michael Pearson, Tears of Glory (London: Macmillan, 1978), 89. E. H. Cookridge, They Came from the Sky (London: Corgi, 1976), 156–62.