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Rating:  Summary: The Angel of Death Review: Gearld Astor's biography of Dr. Joseph Mengele tells an important story to be sure. The notorious Auschwitz camp doctor who personally comdemmed thousands to their deaths and performed hideous experiements on many others is an important symbol of just how depraved the Nazi regime was. That a man of science, a man sworn to prevent human sufferning, could allow his profession to be so grotesquely perverted clearly demonstrates how fundamentaly evil Nazi ideology was. Mengele is a real life villian for the ages, someone the likes of whom humanity will hopefully not see again.Unfortunately, Astor's portrait, while compelling and informative, fails to really capture essence of the man. Perhaps becuase the author apparently received little cooperation from Mengele's (prominent!) family, there isn't musch information about Mengele's early childhood or adulthood, nor of the period from the end of World War II to his escape from Europe in 1949. The two periods of Megele's life where Astor's information is most complete is his time at Auschwitz from 1943-44 and the last two decades of his life, when he lived in Brazil before drowning on the beach in 1979. There's almost nothing in the book about Megele's marriage, nor of his service on the Eastern front with the Waffen SS before a battlefield wound sent him to the death camp and his infamy. Even the Auschwitz period is strangely stilted. There are eyewitness accounts of the atrocities committed by Mengele and of his experiments, but a thorough account of what he thought he was accomplishing is strangely lacking. It must also be said that Astor's prose is at times somewhat stilted, and he occasionally digresses into pop psychology--a dangerous thing to do in a case such as this. Ultimately, Menegele comes off as despicable but still a mysterious figure. Overall, I would give this book a qualified recommendation only because of the importance of its subject matter.
Rating:  Summary: The Angel of Death Review: Gearld Astor's biography of Dr. Joseph Mengele tells an important story to be sure. The notorious Auschwitz camp doctor who personally comdemmed thousands to their deaths and performed hideous experiements on many others is an important symbol of just how depraved the Nazi regime was. That a man of science, a man sworn to prevent human sufferning, could allow his profession to be so grotesquely perverted clearly demonstrates how fundamentaly evil Nazi ideology was. Mengele is a real life villian for the ages, someone the likes of whom humanity will hopefully not see again. Unfortunately, Astor's portrait, while compelling and informative, fails to really capture essence of the man. Perhaps becuase the author apparently received little cooperation from Mengele's (prominent!) family, there isn't musch information about Mengele's early childhood or adulthood, nor of the period from the end of World War II to his escape from Europe in 1949. The two periods of Megele's life where Astor's information is most complete is his time at Auschwitz from 1943-44 and the last two decades of his life, when he lived in Brazil before drowning on the beach in 1979. There's almost nothing in the book about Megele's marriage, nor of his service on the Eastern front with the Waffen SS before a battlefield wound sent him to the death camp and his infamy. Even the Auschwitz period is strangely stilted. There are eyewitness accounts of the atrocities committed by Mengele and of his experiments, but a thorough account of what he thought he was accomplishing is strangely lacking. It must also be said that Astor's prose is at times somewhat stilted, and he occasionally digresses into pop psychology--a dangerous thing to do in a case such as this. Ultimately, Menegele comes off as despicable but still a mysterious figure. Overall, I would give this book a qualified recommendation only because of the importance of its subject matter.
Rating:  Summary: Mengele's story sheds no real light on the man's motives. Review: Gerald Astor has done an excellent job recounting Joseph Menegele's life both before and after the Nazi regime. He paints a pretty depressing picture of a man with no remorse for his crimes against humanity while hiding from a world that hates him, and rightfully so, and the family that protected him. He also shows the greater impact that the personification of Menegele as Evil Incarnate had on the world and media. However the psychological motives for Menegele the man's actions during the Nazi regime remain a mystery. Perhaps this kind of evil always will.
Rating:  Summary: The Mengele Myth and Reality Review: The later half of the book is better than the first, especially detailing Mengele's unrepentant life in hiding in South America. However the man with forever remain an engima. An interesting tale, but one with no real ending for it offers no insight to a man of many, many questions. But for those who want to read about the real Holocaust then this book should be searched for.
Rating:  Summary: The Mengele Myth and Reality Review: The later half of the book is better than the first, especially detailing Mengele's unrepentant life in hiding in South America. However the man with forever remain an engima. An interesting tale, but one with no real ending for it offers no insight to a man of many, many questions. But for those who want to read about the real Holocaust then this book should be searched for.
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