October 2025
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    22 Comments

    1. The Story Teller, Jodi Picoult but it’s fiction, very good story though. Can be upsetting to read but that probably goes without saying. 

    2. I Bear Witness is a fantastic account of the atrocities as they were happening. They’re diary entries from before the start of the war when the Nazi’s first starting coming to power, through to the end of the war (there are 3 books). I would also highly recommend “If This Is A Man” by Primo Levi

    3. The pianist is a good book I say that in terms of what you’re after. It’s harrowing. Schindler’s list is also a book, so is the boy in the striped pajamas. The tattooist of Auschwitz is also good, albeit sugar coated to make it more a love story than detailing the horrors.

    4. The Good Old Days,  edited by Klee, Dresden, and Riess.  It is perpetrator accounts, mostly from the Eastern Front. It is horrifying.

      There are also many diaries from the ghettos.  The Diary of Dawid Sierokowiak is a good entry into the genre. 

    5. Night by Wiesel gives the perspective of a 15 year old Jewish prisoner. It’s heavy but beautifully written.

    6. *Lovely Green Eyes* by Arnost Lustig is a novel about a Jewish girl who passes as a gentile and is able to escape a death camp by being sent to work in an army brothel on the Eastern Front. It is devastating.

      *A Prayer for Kateřina Horovitzová* by the same author is also excellent, but hard to find in English.

    7. VonGooberschnozzle on

      Eichmann in Jerusalem by Hannah Arendt

      Ordinary Men by Christopher Browning

      The Painted Bird by Jerzy Kosiński

    8. Happy_Chimp_123 on

      You should try reading some historical non-fiction:

      •The Holocaust by Martin Gilbert

      •The Holocaust by Laurence Rees

    9. Dry_Huckleberry5545 on

      The 2022 book *The Escape Artist: The Man Who Broke Out of Auschwitz to Warn the World*, author is Jonathan Freedland but it’s the biography of Rudolf Vrba, who was assigned to the dreadful Sonderkommando squad.

    10. I have a minor in Holocaust studies. Please read not only “Night” but also the two sequels “Dawn” and “The Accident”. It’s important to see not only what happened then, but also how it impacted the lives of people after.

      Other suggestions- “My Brother’s Voice” by Stephen Nasser; anything by Primo Levi.

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