A historical detective story and a gripping account of one historian's hunt for answers as he delves into the surprising life of an ordinary Nazi officer.
Daniel Lee is a historian of the Second World War and a specialist in the history of Jews in France and North Africa during the Holocaust. He is a Senior Lecturer in modern history at Queen Mary, University of London, and the author of Petain's Jewish Children (2014). As a BBC Radio 3 New Generation Thinker, Lee is a regular broadcaster on radio. He lives in north London.
Beautiful and gripping, it unfolds like a detective story as an
obscured past emerges into the light.
*Hadley Freeman, author of House of Glass: The Story and Secrets of
a Twentieth-Century Jewish Family*
Memorable and chilling... As well as a brilliant researcher, Lee
proves himself to be an insightful narrator - of both the life of a
Nazi "desk murderer", and the continuing attempts of Griesinger's
family to come to terms with the long shadow his role as an SS
officer has cast over their lives.
*Guardian*
An intriguing, honest and superbly documented portrait of what
could be called an 'unremarkable' SS life... The strength of Lee's
book is the way these facts of history are twinned with the
perverted domesticity of everyday Nazism... The armchair stuffed
with hidden swastikas is an apt symbol for that weird and
disturbing double life.
*Spectator*
[An] absorbing work of historical detection... Lee's riveting book
opens a window onto the life of an "ordinary" Nazi.
*Evening Standard*
Understand this mediocre, provincial Nazi and you understand the
terrible tragedy of 20th-century Germany... This is an admirable
work of historical research, and is carefully and briskly written.
Lee has been a pitbull of a researcher.
*The Times*
A page-turning piece of detective work in which the Jewish
historian painstakingly weaves together scraps of evidence to
assemble a fascinating portrait of an ordinary man who helped
perpetrate extraordinary crimes... Utterly compelling.
*Jewish Chronicle*
Balancing historical research of the highest professional level
with writing...that reads like a fast-paced detective novel... The
SS Officer's Armchair is such a compelling read because Lee leaves
no stone unturned... Fascinating.
*The Times of Israel*
This is a little gem of a book. It is beautifully written and reads
as grippingly as a detective story. The story of the quest is
fascinating in itself but the result is also a work of serious
historical scholarship. Its reconstitution of the life and career
of an 'ordinary Nazi' throws revealing light on the workings of the
Nazi regime.
*Julian Jackson*
A fascinating true-life detective story, as the author engagingly
chronicles his searches in archives and interviews with elderly
survivors... An illuminating biography and more evidence for the
"banality of evil".
*Kirkus Reviews*
Richly detailed and eloquent... Lee's granular focus reveals the
mechanisms by which ordinary Germans were drawn into horrific
crimes. Even those well-versed in the history of the Holocaust will
learn something new.
*Publishers Weekly*
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