An understandably dry read for the most part the main body of this text is comprised of a report by Dr. Leonardo de Benedetti, compiled for the Soviet Army, on medical conditions in the Monowitz (Auschwitz III) concentration camp. Having said that, however, it must be noted that this is a factual text, a document, a report, and yet I couldn't say that the book is any less interesting than, say, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, a fictionalised account of a Siberian gulag that its author in theory had freedom to add more interesting detail to. As medical reports go, it must be said, I suspect you'd be hard pressed to find many that would be of greater interest. The report's heavy use of medical terminology combined with the gaps in the attached glossary made the book a harder read than I expected and certainly disrupted, for me, any momentum the book might have garnered but, again, this is entirely forgivable when mainstream publication of the text was never its intended aim.
The book's intro and outro are the parts most clearly written by Primo Levi, my reason for purchasing the book, and these parts are undeniably tough to read. Through clear, uncompromising prose Levi recounts the annihilation on arrival at the camp of the vast majority of the survivors of his intake's train journey to Auschwitz-Birkenau; he tells of the cruelty within the camp, most surprisingly the cruelty visited on prisoners by prisoners; he tells of the bizarre collection of circumstances that allowed those liberated by the Soviets to remain in the camp and he comments on what he understands to have happened to those who were deemed fit enough for the death march that took place from the camp heading for the heart of the Reich's territory.
Auschwitz Report is probably primarily a book for Primo Levi completionists and those with a heavy interest in either history, medicine, or both but I'm certainly happier for having actually read it rather than leaving my curiosity along with the book on the shelf in Waterstones.