'This is a formidable achievement. As Auden forecast, accurate scholarship may uncover what has driven a culture mad: here is a contribution to that process.' Social History of Medicine
'This is a marvellous book that can be read … by anyone interested in the Nazi period and the ethical and philosophical issues it throws up … detailed historical research of the highest quality … the style is direct, gripping and unevasive in its conclusions … can only encourage people at least not to miss this book.' John Shand, Journal of Medical Ethics
'This book is to be very strongly recommended for its scholarship, clarity, and contemporary relevance.' Journal of Forensic Medicine
'… powerfully written, intellectually challenging and morally courageous. It should be read by anyone who wants to know more about our century's inhuman practices … and should be required reading for students of Nazism.' Omer Bartov, The Times Literary Supplement
'I like books which make me think. Michael Burleigh poses troubling questions and shows how interacting ideas and policies - a colonising mission, eugenics, euthanasia - were gradually transformed and then fused by the opportunity of war into genocide and the Final Solution.' Hugh Trevor-Roper, The Sunday Telegraph
'This marvellously varied collection of his essays … Burleigh's work stands out for three reasons. First, he never loses sight of the fact that those involved were human beings. His use of evidence that illuminates individual experience is consistently superb and often painfully memorable. Second, he writes without jargon in an unaffected and often arresting style. And third, he does not strike facile moralising poses.' Niall Ferguson, The Sunday Telegraph