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Auschwitz: A Doctor's Eyewitness Account
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In 1944, as the Nazis occupied Hungary, nearly the entire Jewish community was deported to Auschwitz. Among them was Dr. Miklos Nyiszli, a Hungarian Jew and trained physician, who narrowly escaped death only to face a haunting assignment: conducting "scientific research" on fellow prisoners under the notorious Dr. Josef Mengele, often referred to as the "Angel of Death." Dr. Nyiszli was chosen to serve as Mengele's personal pathologist. Against all odds, he lived to recount the chilling and eye-opening experiences from Auschwitz, as captured in his memoir. This latest edition of the Penguin "Modern Classics" series includes an introduction by Richard Evans, offering what The New York Review of Books describes as the most insightful short account of life in Auschwitz available.
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WIĘCEJ O SKALI
In 1944, as the Nazis occupied Hungary, nearly the entire Jewish community was deported to Auschwitz. Among them was Dr. Miklos Nyiszli, a Hungarian Jew and trained physician, who narrowly escaped death only to face a haunting assignment: conducting "scientific research" on fellow prisoners under the notorious Dr. Josef Mengele, often referred to as the "Angel of Death." Dr. Nyiszli was chosen to serve as Mengele's personal pathologist. Against all odds, he lived to recount the chilling and eye-opening experiences from Auschwitz, as captured in his memoir. This latest edition of the Penguin "Modern Classics" series includes an introduction by Richard Evans, offering what The New York Review of Books describes as the most insightful short account of life in Auschwitz available.
