This is a decent enough overview of the life of Edith Stein, the Jewish convert to Catholicism, co-founder of the school of philosophy known as phenomenology, prolific scholar, and Carmelite nun. She was arrested by the Nazis and transported to Auschwitz-Birkenau and gassed, along with her sister Rosa, as an act of retaliation for the Christian churches speaking out against the persecution of Jews. Granted, Stein fell into various categories hated by Nazi worldview: a woman of prodigious intellect with no interest in domesticity, of Jewish birth, and a committed Catholic. Sadly, it's hard to see how she could have survived this period of history as long as she lived in Nazi-occupied territory.
There are some curious aspects to this book, including strange anachronisms in the wording at times, which are somewhat irritating. For example, when listing Stein's intellectual interests in terms of disciplines, the book lists 'Women's Studies' as an interest, despite the fact that this discipline didn't exist while Stein was alive (at least, not at universities). Stein's impressive intellect and opinion that women should be able to pursue any occupation they wished makes her an early feminist, perhaps, and a subject of study in current Women's Studies courses. However, listing her as having an interest in this area makes the book seem slightly lacking in the rigour that ironically Stein possessed in her own academic pursuits.
This is not a bad starter book for those who wish to learn about Stein, but there are probably better sources for those who want a more in-depth view of her life and its historical context.