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Krueger's Men: The Secret Nazi Counterfeit Plot and the Prisoners of Block 19

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This true story details the greatest counterfeiting scheme in history and the men the Nazis called upon to help it succeed, a group of concentration-camp Jews. of photos. 2 maps.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2006

36 people are currently reading
191 people want to read

About the author

Lawrence Malkin

10 books1 follower
From the author's website:

Lawrence Malkin is an award-winning correspondent who served in London, Paris, Washington, New Delhi, Madrid, the United Nations, New York City and elsewhere for Time magazine, the International Herald Tribune, and The Associated Press.

Malkin has been a contributor to The Atlantic Monthly, Connoisseur, Fortune, Horizon, The Quarterly Journal of Military History, Queen (London), The Times Literary Supplement (London), World Policy Journal, and others. His dispatches from London received a prize for international financial reporting from the Overseas Press Club, and his essay, "Distributing the Gift of Life," was awarded the Greenwall Foundation's Prize for the best personal essay.

He lives in New York with his wife, who survived World War II hidden in a convent in her native Belgium

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5 stars
19 (12%)
4 stars
56 (38%)
3 stars
50 (34%)
2 stars
19 (12%)
1 star
3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Don.
252 reviews15 followers
February 3, 2009
This is the true story of Nazi Germany's plot to flood the Allies with conterfeit money to collapse their economies. Using printers, artisans, engravers and others, the Nazi's pick prisoners from camps to refine the process.

Although this is an amazing story of survival, luck and part of an underground secret never reveled completely after WWII, this book is oddly schizophrenic.

Malkin's writing style makes part of this book unreadable while other parts are clear and suspenseful. It feels like this book was written at different times and even by different authors. If you like history you'll be able to get through it.
Profile Image for Al Berry.
699 reviews7 followers
January 6, 2019
An interesting look at the Nazi counterfeiting plot; the use of Concentration Camp internees and their fight for survival. The book also takes a look at what the Nazis did with their fake money; mostly used to pay off spies; most notably ‘Cicero’ who worked in the British Embassy in Ankara during the war. The remarkable survival of the concentration camp members working the presses is an interesting tale just of itself; a book worth reading.
Profile Image for Rob.
26 reviews25 followers
March 4, 2009
While the subject matter in and of itself is fascinating -- I found the book and the way it was written to just be ok. I guess I was expecting it to read more like a true-to-life thriller (a la Mark Bowden or Stephen Ambrose), whereas for the most part, the material felt very textbookish.
Still - to think that this group of prisoners counterfeited more than 6-billion dollars (in todays exchange rate) - is pretty mind-boggling and I'm glad I read it.
Profile Image for Mark Moxley-Knapp.
496 reviews2 followers
October 3, 2019
Excellent history of a somewhat unknown subject. Goes into all the background, but also into the lives of those involved, in the camps and even the Nazis. Well-written, detailed, shorter than it seems.
89 reviews1 follower
May 18, 2024
Interesting Read

I knew from other avenues about the operation. This gave a great deal more information about the amounts of pound notes produced and how the crew producing survived. A scholarly work written in ordinary English. I recommend it.
Profile Image for Debra.
2,074 reviews11 followers
June 16, 2011
Slower reading, but amazing in the detail of the Nazi regime, WW2 and the counterfeit operation of British pounds and, almost, US dollars.
Profile Image for Jesús Torres.
11 reviews
April 2, 2018
Compré este libro pensando que sería la novela en la que se había basado la película Los Falsificadores. Lamentablemente, no era exactamente así ya que este libro no es una novela sino un ensayo histórico. Básicamente el autor de "El falsificador de Hitler" reconstruye todos los hechos relacionados con los proyectos nazis destinados a falsificar libras durante la II Guerra Mundial, a partir de un extenso trabajo de recopilación de toda la documentación existente. La prosa es sencilla y el autor, en lugar de limitarse a dar datos y más datos al lector, intenta darle un toque novelesco que a veces hace dudar de que lo que se esté leyendo sea cierto. Aun así, para mí no fue una lectura amena. Es muy sencillo perderse entre los nombres alemanes y las cuestiones económicas. Precisamente muchas de dichas cuestiones se tratan de manera un tanto superficial, dejando la sensación de que nos estamos quedando a medias.
Profile Image for Ulrike.
59 reviews1 follower
January 15, 2018
Heel interessant onderwerp. Ondanks ik al veel over WOII gelezen heb, was het een onderdeel dat ik niet kende. Jammer genoeg was de schrijfstijl vaak droog en heel erg beschrijvend. Ook de achterflap vind ik nogal misleidend. Het is niet echt het verhaal van de mannen van blok 19, maar eerder het verhaal rond het idee van het valsmunten tot de uitvoering.
714 reviews
February 13, 2025
True story of counterfeiting in Nazi Germany with concentration camp members. The British and Americans are asked about a counterfeiting plot and reject it for Germany with all of the controls in their economy it would not have worked. Some needed capital is raised for the Nazi's. Also, over 100 lives are spared in the process. A fascinating book.
Profile Image for Emily Goodson.
160 reviews1 follower
July 17, 2025
A very eye opening read into one of the most secret operations from the nazi regime. Very interesting and fascinating. I love how Lawrence tied the book with ending it about what happened to all of the members who were actually in Block 19-it was a sweet touch.
46 reviews3 followers
November 23, 2022
One of if not longest boring books I ever read. Put it down it never gets any better.
Profile Image for Christine.
7,226 reviews572 followers
March 10, 2010
The story is interesting. The writing at times rather dull. Malkin does a very good job in describing the different countries view on counterfeiting. In other words, the back story is well drawn. When Malkin gets to the actual Block 19, however, the book becomes rather dull. I think part of the reason for this is that Malkin does not do a good job at making the people seem real. The people seem like little more than shadows. As I was reading the last section, I couldn't help but compare the writing style to that of Saul Friedländer, who is dealing with a much larger group of people, yet makes them seem like people. It's true that Friedlander has more tragic endings, but it is more than that. Friedlander never forgets that the people are people. Malkin might not either, but that doesn't come across in his writing. All the Prisoners are the same, most of the Nazis are the same.
84 reviews9 followers
February 23, 2014
Krueger's Men is certainly an interesting read. Malkin's writing is readable though not electrifying, but while he does a decent job with the espionage, when it comes to the actual men of block 19, he falters. The reader is left with little sense of the prisoners' inner lives and struggles, despite the fact that several of them wrote memoirs, so the information should be available. In addition, what could have been a cornerstone of the book, the relationship between the prisoners and Krueger feels underexplored, with little tantalizing hints given but never explored.

Still a worthwhile read for illuminating some little known history.
Profile Image for George.
87 reviews12 followers
November 2, 2008
Only so-so as a book2 1/2 stars, really. An interesting story, a more modest book. the author spends a lot of energy trying to stretch the material out into book format, and insists on making numerous unnecessary editorial comments on all things Nazi. Like many of those picking up the book at this point, I saw the Counterfeiters and wanted to know more. Here's one book where the movie was far better, if not entirely accurate, it would seem. Another film "inspired by true events."
Profile Image for David.
1,443 reviews39 followers
February 24, 2025
2/24/25 --not sure why I didn't review this three months ago and now I can't remember the difference between what I gleaned from this book versus what came from watching a movie on the same subject. I think perhaps I grabbed this and whipped through it immediately after seeing the Netflix movie. I did think the book was well-written and occasionally witty, and it IS a good story. I'd recommend both the book and the film. Maybe the film more than the book.
Profile Image for Bethany.
12 reviews
Want to read
November 16, 2008
i picked this up at b&n after seeing the film 'the counterfeiters', a german film that was based on the true story about the SS during WWII using men from the concentration camps to counterfeit the british pound. a must see...not sure if the book will hold my attention as well. worth a try.
Profile Image for Ryan.
277 reviews3 followers
October 26, 2010
Interesting subject, but not an interesting read. Wouldn't recommend it.
Profile Image for Gbug.
302 reviews8 followers
February 24, 2013
This book is not for everyone. It starts out a little slow, but if you are a WWII history buff just stick with it and it will become facinating.
Profile Image for Rey.
20 reviews15 followers
October 26, 2008
Way too dense. Reads more like a history textbook. Time to rent the movie.
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews

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