3.5 to a 4.
Erich Maria Remarque's story is a sad one. He was a gifted writer, but as often accompanies great talent, his life was a tragic search for happiness and fulfillment.
The author got some historical facts wrong. That said, the focus of the book was Remarque's story, not more general history. It nevertheless is a fascinating window into the life of a German refugee of the Third Reich.
The author cleverly guides the reader through stages of Remarque's life based more or less on the chronological order of Remarque's books. I have read four of these books myself, so I found the stories behind the stories fascinating. It also piqued my curiosity about a few of his other books.
It leaves me wishing American readers would rediscover EMR's books beyond All Quiet on the Western Front. The biographer quoted Maxwell Geismar's New York Times review of The Night in Lisbon:
"A famous European counterpart to Hemingway, Remarque has, through the years, almost converted a handsome minor talent into a major one; whereas Hemingway almost reduced his own large talent into a more limited one."
To my embarrassment, I have not yet read Hemingway, but perhaps it is because I have been so riveted by Remarque.