Meh. For such a respected professor, and prolific author; even though I found some information I hadn't known before, there really wasn't anything I hadn't beforehand. I found he glossed over the early years in the Ghettos; he failed to mention the Velodrome Round-Up in France; and he only mentioned the Eastern European Jews, British Jews, and the American Jews. What about the Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand Jews, who all fought in WWII, against the Nazi Regime? (We all know that America didn't enter the war until after Pearl Harbour.) If he decided to group the British Commonwealth, with just being "British"; his statics would be skewed. Not to mention, he barely had a word to say about other 'abominations'...Romanies, Communists, (Ironic), people of African descent. If you didn't look "Aryan", or had different ideals; you could be in the chambers, or mass firing squads. I noticed that somebody made the remark on their review, that they, "couldn't believe it was used as a textbook." I wholeheartedly agree. But perhaps not for the same reason.