First of all, Bill O'Reilly writes in a style that is close, no identical, to the way he speaks. So saying someone else is writing the whole book for him (stated by other posters) is just wrong. As are some of the evaluations of his placements within the present politico too. Obviously, some have made judgments of extreme bias without once having listened to the man at all. He is not a strong Conservative. In fact, so moderate that he has to be rude to get a word in during his own show, at times. Clearly there are many who just listen to their choirs and nothing else. Many small government Conservatives, libertarian slant, socially traditional, and almost all Christian Conservative see O'Reilly as nearly in the "other" camp. He is a Moderate and on several key issues, like immigration, has Independent stance/status.
Second, some of the critique opinions of this book on the downside do have several strong points. Especially upon stronger evidence in/for more proof in the pattern of "accident" before and on the incident which resulted in Patton's death. But to post the summation of this lack- that because having never heard of this murder charge accusation before this book, so therefore it can't be true? ROFL. With the way history is taught in colleges today, that is absolutely a laughable premise. Believe me, when I went to school in the 1950's-1970's the "first" time, I was taught that Patton's death was highly suspicious and buried within the birth of the CIA for disagreement with official military compliance. This was by Sisters of Mercy, Jesuits, Christian Bros. of de la Salle, in case you'd like to know. O'Reilly went to the same kinds of schools in NY, but take my word for it- the schools at all levels and public or private of all types did not teach history then as they do today. It wasn't taught in an ideologue pattern to omission of the facts that don't "fit" proper P.C. dialog or mantra. They actually made you see physical facts and debate historical choices. I can remember having to draw the Battle of the Bulge on the blackboard, for instance. It was a terrible botch up and lost a huge number of Allies lives, mostly American.
Regardless, that detailing of the end of the war was 5 star. It was nearly exactly what my Dad told me when I was a girl and didn't even want to hear about it. He was in that exact crux aftermath, heading a prisoner of war camp in Trieste from 1945-1947 as he was German born and spoken, but American citizen. In fact, he arrived and tried to get to Patton's funeral and missed it by 3 days. Christmas intervened. My Dad opined about few politico things to us but never failed to mention how FDR first and primarily, but especially Eisenhower, botched the end of the war in the European Theatre. He liked Truman's reactions but said most of the damage was done already by Yalta, Potsdam (FDR) by the time Truman could get the legs of the situation under himself. Truman was kept completely in the dark until after FDR's death. My father always thought that Eastern Europe unto Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia were set back to the dark ages with complete abandon and utmost stupidity. He saw Hungarians, Polish, Czechs with no home or no life to return to except one of slave labor or Siberia. He could never understand way Patton and the Blue Devils who came up the boot of Italy (his division) didn't keep going to save the millions of kids and women being raped, tortured and killed by the Russian mobs. He said they (Russian gangs) were not an army, but a mob at that point. He said the American infantry was not depleted as the other nations' armies were, and that Churchill knew they had to keep going but was completely negated in any outcome. Except for the summit photos, his power was virtually invisible at the summits when they "split it up". Stalin killed 60 million people eventually, and not just Russians, but speakers of dozens of other languages and cultures. That's about 7 times as many as Hitler murdered.
What was so highly superlative about this book (5 star for me) was the lengthy first 3/4ths that details the years 1944-1946 on the scenes of the European Theatre. And to say the entire book's course was not valid because this war scenario had nothing to do with Patton's death? Ridiculous. Everything that was going on was pivotal to Patton's situation. Especially because of his style of arrogant swagger and complete inability to market himself as other than what he was. And he WAS an individual who does not fit(and never would have fit) into the quickly overwhelming humanistic relativism philosophy that begins to dominate during this era and eventually triumphs in a way that enables closed world "eyes" to horrific genocides in Africa or SW Asia or Russia that follow in the decades after WWII. Genocides that kill 7 or 8 times the numbers of humans killed by deplorable and deadly Fascism, but that are mostly conveniently ignored to this day. And never more ignored than in literature, at that.
Read Patton's speech of June 5, 1944, printed at the end of this O'Reilly book, and then reread it again. It is nearly the antithesis of what core beliefs are presently. It fits in with Caesar or Napoleon, far more than intelligentsia views from the 20th Century. Patton was a problem because he refused to ignore an enemy. And his recognition skills for an enemy could not be submerged in any kind of diplomatic vagueness. Churchill too was not an ignorer, but he was gotten rid of much more easily as his power base was nearly obliterated after 5 years of horrific attrition. And so his politico system bounced him out too, and choose to ignore when it no longer wanted to view. A reality of vile and despicable behaviors beyond a supposedly "common" sense of humanity veneer that left 60 million dead in 20 years.
My poor Dad saw them running westwards with the bite marks and missing flesh and he couldn't be an ignorer either. Now I wish I would have listened more to his stories, and was more tolerate to his politico judgments. I wasn't.
This was the best O'Reilly book to read, and yet the book with the least criminal proof accuracy for the death cause. But that was such a dire time in history with millions having no home or country for return that paperwork, not even for a general, became any kind of consideration. And yet, it seems so "off" that accident and aftermath. That the outcome was so much more dire for Patton than it was for the others in the car? Coupled with the vanishing of witnesses? Beyond suspicious and so highly convenient for blooming Federal secrecy organization (USA).
The form of putting so much material into the footnotes on each page too, is quite different in this particular "Killing" series book. I liked it. It's a throwback and is more elemental- quite another style from most present hazy to context and nebulous erudite writing of duplicity. Items or names put into the paragraph length sentences with assumed hubris of understanding like-minded context being endemic for about a decade now. Current style redefines entire words or concepts without a footnote. Consistently. 300 words on theory for every 50 of fact or definition. Hopefully that style of footnote detailing will return to give the young some facts from the era about physical or celeb or public knowledge background for the times portrayed within the main copy. Because the college crowd certainly fails to have context to that degree of historical record right now. They tend to read theory and program advancement of a philosophy of actions far more now than they read about any specifics of battle or stats or logistics of supply. Like a kind of Wikipedia Cliff Notes for everything. For instance, I had a group of 18-25 year olds, about 30 individuals, reading American History once, and only one student knew what a K ration was at the course's end. That's abominable.
When we had to draw that line through the forest on the board (Bulge tactics), I never "got" completely what that teacher tried to portray about overrunning your supply line (Germans during Bulge)or stopping at the wrong times in horrendous error (Allies). I do now.