Monuments Man is the wartime memoir of James Rorimer, one of the "Monuments Men" made famous in the 21st century Hollywood movie (Rorimer was the inspiration for George Clooney's role). The story goes from stateside training to saving cathedrals in France, the salt mines where paintings were hidden away by the Nazis and finally to Berchtesgarden and the other castles of the highest Nazi leadership. The importance of the role that Rorimer and others played in preserving art treasures and returning them to their rightful owners is obvious in retrospect, but acted as sort of a parallel mission during World War II alongside and sometimes conflicting with the wider mission of actually winning the War.
Rorimer's children created this book by taking Rorimer's original memoirs, adding historical context and explanatory endnotes, and illustrating it with amazing photos of the places and events Rorimer describes. A book about art and historic architecture deserves and needs photos like this to be appreciated, and the illustrations are the best aspect of the book. The memoir itself is somewhat lacking. By its nature, it's one person recounting what happened at the time, lacks a larger theme or context because these were not known to the author at the time, and doesn't flow as a narrative. Aside from re-writing it in a more engaging way, it's hard to see how this could be avoided, and the mediocre movie about the Monuments Men illustrates the difficulty of presenting this important story.