Wednesday, February 25, 2009

REVIEW: The evil that ordinary men can do. (guardian.co.uk)

Jonathan Littell's extraordinary Holocaust novel asks what it is that turns normal people into mass killers. By Jason Burke

This remarkable book was first published in France in 2006, as Les Bienveillantes. The first significant work of Jonathan Littell, Francophone son of American spy author Robert, it was an entirely unexpected success. Gallimard, the publisher, originally printed 5,000 copies. Within months, Les Bienveillantes had sold 300,000 copies, had been welcomed by critics as the most important book for 50 years and had won the Goncourt and Femina prizes. Stupendous sums were paid for its foreign rights and it went on to sell more than a million copies across Europe. Now it has been translated into English and will surely cause a similar fuss.

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