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Condition: Used: Good
Comment: Binding is tight. May have bent pages, some markings, and/or moderate shelf wear. May be ex-library with library stamps stickers. Used books may not include companion materials. 100% Satisfaction guaranteed! Eligible for Amazon free Supersaver/Prime shipping, package tracking, and 24/7 customer service!

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Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning Hardcover – Deckle Edge, September 8, 2015

4.2 out of 5 stars 146 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Tim Duggan Books; 1St Edition edition (September 8, 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1101903457
  • ISBN-13: 978-1101903452
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 1.4 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (146 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #51,248 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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By Ash Jogalekar TOP 1000 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on August 3, 2015
Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Every time there’s a new upcoming book on the Holocaust one is compelled to ask what could be different about it. While no amount of literature on this unspeakable tragedy can suffice to truly allow us to comprehend it, it’s worth asking whether we can potentially learn new insights about it that could lead to understanding and wisdom. Fortunately historian Timothy Snyder’s book answers this question with a resounding yes. Snyder has produced an original and nuanced interpretation of the Holocaust that goes beyond almost every single simplistic and overarching belief that we may harbor about it. It is a valuable addition even to the vast literature on the topic.

The principal argument of Snyder’s book is that the Holocaust was made possible by the obliteration of the identity of the state in various countries. While it wouldn’t have been possible without Hitler’s murderous racial beliefs, it would have been far more difficult to implement had not the right political conditions existed in the various countries which the Nazis conquered. Where the state retained its prewar political, bureaucratic and legal machinery far fewer Jews were killed; where it did not Jews saw almost complete obliteration of their communities. And it is this emphasis on the state as the enabler or disabler of the Holocaust that leads Snyder to see both disturbing complicity and hope in human nature. This is because the state is yours; it is not foreign. Your own state abandoning you is far damning that any kind of foreign invasion.

The key role that the preservation or destruction of the state played in saving the lives of Jews is apparent in the fact that the vast majority of Jews – including German Jews - were killed by the Nazis in stateless zones.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
History, particularly as it is taught in our public schools, comes to us filtered down through the perspectives of those involved. Nations want to see themselves in the best light, and we, as citizens, want to accept that what we're taught is the unbiased truth. The whole truth; not just the bits and pieces considered relevant by those in charge of textbooks and curriculum. Often only time and distance allows us to see clearly the entire picture, exactly as it played out, without distorting the view. Timothy Snyder gives us that gift here, and it's one we need to accept and acknowledge.

This book is not an easy read. We can't expect it to be. The content is harsh, disturbing, and frightening. The facts are laid out for us here and we can't look away. We can't make excuses. Millions of innocent people were murdered, while nations stood by and allowed it, or even assisted.

The content here is also complex. It's not a book you're likely to read quickly. This is one of those books that takes time to absorb. That being said, the author does a phenomenal job of putting it all together. The timeline is consistent and precise. We start well before WWII, back when the USSR was formed and forced starvation was taking place in the Ukraine. We see how this, along with other events, paved the way for Hitler's Holocaust. Nothing occurs in a vacuum, least of all international events of this magnitude. Hitler, as vicious as he was, did not act alone. Germany did not act alone. Somewhere, the spark turned into a flame. Along the way, others were complicit. Nowhere have I read such an intricate, detailed, terrifying account exposing the truth of WWII.

This is a timely read. History does not repeat itself, exactly. We don't have a second Hitler on the rise.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
As an avid reader of the Second World War, I own numerous volumes covering the Holocaust. Most of these books are either first-person accounts (victim and perpetrator) or works of historical reference. Timothy Snyder’s BLACK EARTH offers a unique view of (arguably) history’s greatest atrocity by focusing on the elements that enabled such “effortless” mass-killing. While I found the book’s basic premise to be stimulating; I felt the author’s penchant for reiteration on some subject matters to be tedious and, at times, confusing. Additionally, the final “history as a warning” chapter seemed unnecessarily out-of-place and somewhat alarmist (and opinionated) in nature.

Snyder’s view on the Holocaust is both eye-opening and unique. Rather than focusing on what happened and why, he delves into the issues that enabled such an atrocity to not only happen, but grow with impunity. We get a better understanding that while Hitler and the Nazi’s carry the banner of notoriety associated with the “Final Solution”, they were certainly not alone in implementing its goals. Additionally, Snyder sheds light on how the very elements that permitted mass killing dictated why the probability of survival favored some Jews over others.

I found much of Snyder’s work quite fascinating as he explains how statelessness became the chief facilitator in executing the Nazi’s anti-Semitic quest of “Lebensraum”. His argument that the dissolution of the state leaves people powerless, un-represented and ultimately unprotected. Answering the question of what to do with such people is simple … anything you want. Although not the CAUSE of the killing (an ideological matter), it enabled the killing to spread relatively unchecked.
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