Positive
Christopher Priest,
Spectator (UK)
In February 1985 the historian David G. Marwell was working at the US Department of Justice when he was assigned to join an international search for Mengele, then believed still to be alive. Marwell already had access to Mengele’s correspondence and diaries and, remarkably, the text of what appeared to be an autobiographical novel.
Positive
David Margolick,
The Wall Street Journal
David Marwell has been thinking about Mengele for a long time.
Positive
Steven Aschheim,
The New York Times Book Review
What specifically distinguishes Marwell’s account from previous studies concerns his personal involvement in the Justice Department’s Office of Special Investigations (O.S.I.) and the search for and identification of Mengele. Much of the volume is taken up with Mengele’s escape to, and life in, various South American countries and the bungled attempts to locate and capture him.
Positive
Mark Knoblauch,
Booklist
Marwell...has deeply researched Mengele’s life.
Positive
Adam Gopnik,
The New Yorker
Marwell’s life has much new to tell us, both about Mengele himself and, more significant, about the social and scientific milieu that allowed him to flourish. There is nothing surprising in educated people doing evil, but it is still amazing to see how fully they construct a rationale to let them do it, piling plausible reason on self-justification, until, like Mengele, they are able to look themselves in the mirror every morning with bright-eyed self-congratulation..
Positive
Publishers Weekly
Historian Marwell...delivers a richly detailed yet ponderous biography of the infamous doctor.
Positive
Kirkus
A chilling biography.