Reviews"Remains a perfect analytic supplement for students reading (as mine do) the memoir literature (Wiesel, Levi, Tec, etc.) in courses on the Holocaust and its impact on survivors and, through them, on western imagination."--A.J. Slavin, University of Louisville "Powerful book! An intriguing look into the inner workings of the death camps. A must reading for anyone who wants to know just how inhumanly the Naqzis treated their victims."-- Prof. Marvin Seperson, New England College "[A] very fine book."--Saul Lerner, Purdue University Calumet "A brilliant and beautifully written book about one of the ultimate human experiences."--E.O. Wilson, Harvard University "An important, tormented, tormenting book."--Elie Wiesel, Boston University, "Remains a perfect analytic supplement for students reading (as mine do) the memoir literature (Wiesel, Levi, Tec, etc.) in courses on the Holocaust and its impact on survivors and, through them, on western imagination."--A.J. Slavin, University of Louisville, "Powerful book! An intriguing look into the inner workings of the death camps. A must reading for anyone who wants to know just how inhumanly the Nazis treated their victims."-- Prof. Marvin Seperson, New England College, "Remains a perfect analytic supplement for students reading (as mine do) the memoir literature (Wiesel, Levi, Tec, etc.) in courses on the Holocaust and its impact on survivors and, through them, on western imagination."--A.J. Slavin,University of Louisville "Powerful book! An intriguing look into the inner workings of the death camps. A must reading for anyone who wants to know just how inhumanly the Naqzis treated their victims."-- Prof. Marvin Seperson,New England College "[A] very fine book."--Saul Lerner,Purdue University Calumet "A brilliant and beautifully written book about one of the ultimate human experiences."--E.O. Wilson,Harvard University "An important, tormented, tormenting book."--Elie Wiesel,Boston University, "One turns the last page convinced that, doomsday prophecies notwithstanding, the human species will continue to resist and to survive."--Wassily Leontief, New York University, "A horrifying, well-written, moving account of how men and women come to survive in the worst of all possible worlds."--The Washington Post, "Remains a perfect analytic supplement for students reading (as mine do) the memoir literature (Wiesel, Levi, Tec, etc.) in courses on the Holocaust and its impact on survivors and, through them, on western imagination."--A.J. Slavin, University of Louisville"Powerful book! An intriguing look into the inner workings of the death camps. A must reading for anyone who wants to know just how inhumanly the Naqzis treated their victims."--Prof. Marvin Seperson, New England College"[A] very fine book."--Saul Lerner, Purdue University Calumet"A brilliant and beautifully written book about one of the ultimate human experiences."--E.O. Wilson, Harvard University"An important, tormented, tormenting book."--Elie Wiesel, Boston University"One turns the last page convinced that, doomsday prophecies notwithstanding, the human species will continue to resist and to survive."--Wassily Leontief, New York University"A horrifying, well-written, moving account of how men and women come to survive in the worst of all possible worlds."--The Washington Post"Infinitely touching and heartening."--Alfred Kazin, The New York Times Book Review, "A brilliant and beautifully written book about one of the ultimate human experiences."--E.O. Wilson, Harvard University, "Powerful book! An intriguing look into the inner workings of the death camps. A must reading for anyone who wants to know just how inhumanly the Naqzis treated their victims."-- Prof. Marvin Seperson, New England College, "Remains a perfect analytic supplement for students reading (as mine do) the memoir literature (Wiesel, Levi, Tec, etc.) in courses on the Holocaust and its impact on survivors and, through them, on western imagination."--A.J. Slavin, University of Louisville "Powerful book! An intriguing look into the inner workings of the death camps. A must reading for anyone who wants to know just how inhumanly the Naqzis treated their victims."--Prof. Marvin Seperson, New England College "[A] very fine book."--Saul Lerner, Purdue University Calumet "A brilliant and beautifully written book about one of the ultimate human experiences."--E.O. Wilson, Harvard University "An important, tormented, tormenting book."--Elie Wiesel, Boston University "One turns the last page convinced that, doomsday prophecies notwithstanding, the human species will continue to resist and to survive."--Wassily Leontief, New York University "A horrifying, well-written, moving account of how men and women come to survive in the worst of all possible worlds."--The Washington Post "Infinitely touching and heartening."--Alfred Kazin, The New York Times Book Review
Table Of ContentI. The Survivor in FictionII. The Will to Bear WitnessIII. Excremental AssaultIV. Nightmare and WakingV. Life in DeathVI. Us and ThemVII. Radical NakednessBIbliography