The Master of Auschwitz: Audiobook By Rudolf Hoess cover art

The Master of Auschwitz:

Memoirs of Rudolf Hoess, Kommandant SS

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The Master of Auschwitz:

By: Rudolf Hoess
Narrated by: Tim Dalgleish
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About this listen

The first-hand account of the life, career, and the practices of horror at Auschwitz, written by Auschwitz Kommandant SS Rudolf Hoss as he awaited execution for his crimes. Including his psychological interviews at Nuremberg.

©2016 Stephen R. Pastore (P)2016 Stephen R. Pastore
Americas Europe Historical History & Theory Political Science Politicians Politics & Activism Politics & Government United States Scary
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Instructional Tale • Coherent Story • Good Narration • Honest Accounts • Fascinating Perspective • Important Read
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Very enciteful. The authors blame is only slightly mitigated by his ending. Gave me a better understanding of the thought process behind the Holocaust.

What a piece of crap the author was.

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The mind- boggling insight into the head of a man who loves his wife and children .... yet send not tens of thousands .... but multiple MILLIONS OF FAMILIES to there death .... and feels justified in doing so is .... IM SHOCKED AND UNSETTLED ! Humans are NOT a civilized species !

WOW

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I’ve listen to it at least 5 times while working, if you enjoy history and 1st hand experiences being told then you will enjoy this audiobook

Great

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Once I started it I didn't want to stop listening. It is a look into the personal and professional life of a man with no emotions or guilt of the crimes he committed. I highly recommend this to anyone wanting to know more about such a tragic place in history and the man behind it.

Very informative

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This books great insight into how the camps operated and Hoess’s personal perspective on things.

Very interesting

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If you are even looking at this title I assume you've had some background reading on ww2 the third Reich and the SS KZ System. The memoirs of Höss are valuable for two primary reasons: 1. he was among the closest to the atrocities of WW2 Germany and provides details and POV that only he can; 2. his account shows the flaws and self deception used to make tidy the horrors of genocide. It's very clear from reading other accounts that Höss wasnt just a victim of circumstance and patriotism. He was a leader and so admits it. He says he never personally abused an inmate and that he never knew of any institutional abuse. While he may not have whipped a prisoner he readily set up firing squads and built Zyklon B gas chambers to kill millions. That said it's hard not to have a modicum of sympathy for this perpetrator if not for the farewell made to his family.

This is a good listen. There are some mispronunciations of German but it's not too jarring.

Hindsight. Not 20/20

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I wish I had the credit back. The narration was fine, could have done without the creepy music and bells that started, and abruptly cutoff, between chapters.
Hoss had an incredible memory for mundane and intricate details, yet had no emotion, no guilt, no remorse (other than "well, the war's over and we got caught and now I see that the world thinks we were wrong about the extermination camps, and the whole Jewish situation, but I was just following orders). And then he turns around and says he wouldn't mistreat a prisoner and he didn't like the conditions at the camp, but oversaw mass executions and burials and digging up bodies and burning them. But he considered himself a nice guy! I've read much better Holocaust memoirs than this.

Ramblings of a delusional sociopath

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Gripping. frightening. A must read. In Hoess's own words. He feels no guilt or shame.

The Master of Auschwitz

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Oddly fascinating as you go into the mind of a mad man. A must read

Disturbing

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What I liked most about the book that it was written by a man prior to his impending death, so he knew that he was a condemned man. Knowing that his appointment with the gallows could not be avoided his factual accounts of the events in the book are credible and authentic. There was little reason to write any type of alibis or self serving mitigating statements. You especially experience that when you hear his farewell messages to his wife and each of his children.

The Master of Auschwitz

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