The horrific deeds of Joseph Mengele, Angel of Death in Auschwitz, are well known. I read this book really more as a story of escape, of assuming a different identity and disappearing off the grid, because Mengele escaped detection/detention for about 35 years. From the day until he left Auschwitz, in the winter of 1944, until his death by drowning in 1979, he had really spent little time in captivity, and that mainly in the immediate aftermath of the war. After a couple of years working on a farm in Germany, he managed to book a passage to Buenos Aires. Subsequently he lived in Paraguay and in Brazil, under a series of assumed names (borrowed, stolen or invented). Somehow he managed to find powerful friends/protectors in South America, usually emigrated Nazis or homegrown fascists with nostalgia for the Third Reich. And, incredibly, through these decades he stayed in touch with his family back in Germany, not just by letter, but by visits of his family's trusted go-between, his second wife, and eventually, his estranged son.
There is no way that an escaped SS officer could ever be described as sympathetic. But Mengele comes across as unrelentingly arrogant, superior, convinced of his own infallibility etc. This man was not only evil, he was insufferable as well! During his years in South America, he spent several years with various hosts, all of whom seemed happy to have him move on and be rid of his condescending lectures. And yet - and this is the most incomprehensible part of it all - there was always some unrepentant Nazi sympathizer to procure for him another name, another home, another job. I had never before appreciated just how efficient and extensive the Nazi networks in South America were, and continued to be, for decades after WWII.
The search for Mengele is also one of the topics of the book. And what I liked is that although hindsight is 20/20, missed opportunities for catching Mengele are described soberly, but without too much blaming. Yes, Mengele was in American captivity for a while in the chaotic aftermath of WWII and released. Yes, various officials failed to see (or were bribed to ignore?) alterations on his papers or irregularities with his application for Paraguayan citizenship. Yes, the extradition demand from Germany proceeded at a glacial pace. And yes, experienced Nazi hunters like Simon Wiesenthal and the Klarsfelds kept on dashing off after false traces, usually provided by unreliable informants. And all this time Mengele was living his life - first in the cosmopolitan city of Buenos Aires, but then in an isolated farms in Paraguay and Brazil. There were undoubtedly many missed opportunities to apprehend him - but I think that most of these were the result of confusion, bureaucratic infighting, or simply different priorities.
The book is meticulously researched and much of it makes good sense. I think a timeline, with the various aliases and addresses that Mengele used, might have been helpful. Either way, I was fascinated and read the book in a single weekend.