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duparker's review against another edition
4.0
This is a very interesting and fascinating retelling of the looting and destruction performed by Nazi Germany. It really is unbelievable that these acts occurred and it just seems so out of touch with today and with the way that sane/rational people treasure antiquities and knowledge. I understand that not everyone fits that thought process, but still it is fascinating to understand what passed as a good idea during WWII.
horthhill's review against another edition
5.0
"The Book Thieves: The Nazi Looting of Europe's Libraries and the Race to Return a Literary Inheritance" by Anders Rydell was an excellent history on a subject I hadn't considered before but so obviously had to have happened. It wasn't just art that the Nazi's pilfered.
mnboyer's review against another edition
3.0
I couldn't decide between 3 and 4 stars on this one, and decided to go 3 stars.
The Nazis, in sort, suck -- alongside their genocide of Jewish individuals (and many others) they decided that confiscating and destroying books would be a great way to erase certain aspects of culture/history that they saw as anti-Nazi. This book discusses what happened to these books and explains how researchers are trying to get books back to "where they came from."
The book delves into Nazi policy and discusses the Jewish genocide. Both of these divert, at times, from what I thought most of the book would be about: books. I picked this up to add to my "library sciences" shelf and decided it really sits more comfortably in the history genre. The book has a lot of "dry" moments and "boring" springs to mind. This is unfortunate, as I really wanted to love this. If you're looking for adventure, pick up [b:The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History|6514074|The Monuments Men Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History|Robert M. Edsel|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1344270659s/6514074.jpg|6705842] because this book is not as "adventure".
A good book, but one that I expected more from. That may be my issue as a reader though. Still, a really good addition to research on WWII, Nazis, Jewish culture, etc.
The Nazis, in sort, suck -- alongside their genocide of Jewish individuals (and many others) they decided that confiscating and destroying books would be a great way to erase certain aspects of culture/history that they saw as anti-Nazi. This book discusses what happened to these books and explains how researchers are trying to get books back to "where they came from."
The book delves into Nazi policy and discusses the Jewish genocide. Both of these divert, at times, from what I thought most of the book would be about: books. I picked this up to add to my "library sciences" shelf and decided it really sits more comfortably in the history genre. The book has a lot of "dry" moments and "boring" springs to mind. This is unfortunate, as I really wanted to love this. If you're looking for adventure, pick up [b:The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History|6514074|The Monuments Men Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History|Robert M. Edsel|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1344270659s/6514074.jpg|6705842] because this book is not as "adventure".
A good book, but one that I expected more from. That may be my issue as a reader though. Still, a really good addition to research on WWII, Nazis, Jewish culture, etc.
captainsillypants's review
Was doing audio and just never felt like listening. Maybe try again with physical book at some point?
fabrychenko's review against another edition
4.0
Книга - литературный репортаж. Автор перемещается между библиотеками/музеями в разных странах Европы, собирает сведения о книгах, которые были сворованы нацистами во времена господства НСДАП, и узнаёт, какие судьбы стояли за этими книгами.
Очень сложная книга в плане чтения, ведь ты читаешь добротную документалку, в которой очень много исторических моментов на квадратный сантиметр, и нужно сильно постараться не потерять концентрацию в потоке информации. Но в то же время это не бездушный поток фактов, автор сделал максимум, чтобы читатель прочувствовал весь ад войны через книжную историю.
Очень сложная книга в плане чтения, ведь ты читаешь добротную документалку, в которой очень много исторических моментов на квадратный сантиметр, и нужно сильно постараться не потерять концентрацию в потоке информации. Но в то же время это не бездушный поток фактов, автор сделал максимум, чтобы читатель прочувствовал весь ад войны через книжную историю.
katleap's review against another edition
3.0
I read this for a college class. It is definitely a thinky book. It took a bit to get into the book and it builds on itself. I think it was worth reading but its not really that would have picked on my own.
alba_marie's review against another edition
informative
sad
tense
slow-paced
5.0
"Robbing people of their words and narratives is a way of imprisoning them."
Sad, fascinating and gut wrenching story of the books plundered and destroyed by the nazis. At times hard to put down, other times harder still to read...
This is a long book, and it is not an easy one to read as it is about the horrors of the Holocaust, so enter at your own risk. This book focuses on the plundered books that the Nazis looted from libraries and private collections throughout Europe. Each chapter picks a 'focus' destination or library from France to Thessaloniki, Poland to Vilnius. No community was safe from the Nazis. It wasn't enough to murder the Jews and other marginalised communities like Communists and Freemasons; they had to take control of their history and culture too, erasing everything that made them unique and re-writing the narrative to suit them.
If you are interested in nonfiction and want to know more about the sorry fate of Europe's books during WWII, this is a really good deep dive into the topic. But beware – the horrific deeds of the Nazis are discussed, often in detail.
My favourite section was the paper mill of Vilnius (Lithuania), and the heroic deeds of the ghetto prisoners who went to great lengths to save, hide and smuggle as much Jewish literature as they could, complete with a hidden bunker, an outside smuggler, and James Bond-esque escape by airplane with books in tow.
CW: Death, murder, Holocaust, genocide, torture, violence, war, antisemitism, prejudice, cultural destruction.
Sad, fascinating and gut wrenching story of the books plundered and destroyed by the nazis. At times hard to put down, other times harder still to read...
This is a long book, and it is not an easy one to read as it is about the horrors of the Holocaust, so enter at your own risk. This book focuses on the plundered books that the Nazis looted from libraries and private collections throughout Europe. Each chapter picks a 'focus' destination or library from France to Thessaloniki, Poland to Vilnius. No community was safe from the Nazis. It wasn't enough to murder the Jews and other marginalised communities like Communists and Freemasons; they had to take control of their history and culture too, erasing everything that made them unique and re-writing the narrative to suit them.
If you are interested in nonfiction and want to know more about the sorry fate of Europe's books during WWII, this is a really good deep dive into the topic. But beware – the horrific deeds of the Nazis are discussed, often in detail.
My favourite section was the paper mill of Vilnius (Lithuania), and the heroic deeds of the ghetto prisoners who went to great lengths to save, hide and smuggle as much Jewish literature as they could, complete with a hidden bunker, an outside smuggler, and James Bond-esque escape by airplane with books in tow.
CW: Death, murder, Holocaust, genocide, torture, violence, war, antisemitism, prejudice, cultural destruction.
Graphic: Death, Genocide, Gun violence, Hate crime, Racism, Suicide, Violence, Xenophobia, Antisemitism, Murder, Fire/Fire injury, War, and Deportation