For at least 45 years I have been perplexed at how a whole culture of otherwise modern and civilized people could allow and promote the systematic extermination of millions of people simply because of the cultural and (perceived) genetic differences of those people. The Holocaust is the most disturbing incident in the history of humanity in my opinion -- in large part because I recognize the fact that I and my fellow countrymen are in no way significantly different from the German people who perpetrated this outrage.
This book shed a lot of light on this subject. I'm sure that some of the author's conclusions are controversial, but his explanations, taken as a whole, are the best and most rational and believable that I have read or heard. Most compelling is the author's most important assertion that the Holocaust definitely was not a one-man job or even the work of only a small group of highly ideological racists. Instead it was the direct result of centuries of anti-semitism that permeated the history, religion, economy, politics, and culture of Germany.
The ancient history that is depicted in the first few chapters captivated me, as did the last five or six chapters dealing with the Nazi era. The chapters in between, however, (about two-thirds of the book) dealt with historical occurrences of the 18th and 19th centuries, which I found to be both somewhat dull and overly complex, but obviously necessary for the author to fully develop his thesis.
A very good and thorough book on this very important subject. WE MUST NEVER FORGET.