Netherlands Books
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Insights into the Thoughts of Heinrich HimmlerReview Date: 2007-11-15
The Kersten Memoirs 1040-1945Review Date: 2000-11-03

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Good, but could be better.Review Date: 2001-06-09
Lonely Planet: SwedenReview Date: 2000-08-02
Like an encyclopedia, it leaves nothing to chance for planning each leg of your trip. It has two outstanding sections that sets this travel guide apart from others.
First, is it's Facts For The Visitor. It highlights the Best And Worst of what to hit or miss on your visit, which includes incidentals like free car-ferries, but expensive beer, bread, and parking fees. This section also includes the essentials for planning prior to your visit. It is a must for acquainting yourself with the cultural differences and practicals of visiting abroad.
Second best, but not least, section is the Getting There And Away. This is the best guide I have seen that gives all the transportation alternatives available to get you where you want to be, with schedules and pricing. Though this section does not boast of winning any photo contest, it has more cities per area to give the best overall opportunity to visit the real country, not just the tourist traps. Also included are internet connections to give even greater details, which brings the reference material to life.
Overall, I believe this guide is the bible for experiencing Sweden in the first year of the new millennium.

Classic MichelinReview Date: 2007-09-13
It looks like this 2007 edition is up to the standards of the classic green guides, dense with cultural information, printed on fine quality paper, and in a wonderful format easy for toting along and reading on a train.
However, it's not vinyl bound as Amazon's listing states...it appears to be a paperback (which is what Michelin's own site admits to). It's just fine for traveling, but while other companies are moving to plasticized bindings that are water proof and wear well after being shoved into backpacks and backpockets, Michelin seems to have taken a small step back. Don't misundertand, the quality of binding is excellent, it would just be a little bit more excellent if the cover were really vinyl. Also, no map is included (as they did with green guides in the old days), but that's not a big loss given the many small but fine maps inside.
This book is a pleasure to hold and read.
Michelin Green Guides - accept no substitutes!Review Date: 2007-01-12
Too bad they switched to these new 'updated' book covers. The old ones had more class!
Used price: $0.39

Couldn't Put it Down!Review Date: 2003-03-23
Good People Make a DifferenceReview Date: 2001-07-01


New Netherland Described at Great CostReview Date: 2007-05-07
Excellent.Review Date: 2005-09-09
Note: It is encyclopedic!

Used price: $4.72

A wonderful contributionReview Date: 2008-02-10
A must have for anyone interested in the Jewish history of Poland.
Seth J. Frantzman
A Guide to Jewish PolandReview Date: 2004-04-20
This is a subject for volumes, not for a thin paperback.
I suppose that if I had to describe Polish Jewry "on one foot" (as they say) this book would be it. This is the book in your backpack when you travel to Poland. It opens with the Kaddish. You'll need that often, as you travel through the country.
It then goes on to list some of the Jewish landmark events in a "Chronology of Jewish Presence in Poland before and after WWII" which starts at 860 AD. That's just to give you a taste of how rich the Jewish heritage was in Poland.
There are several short chapters on the history of the Jews in Poland, and an introduction to Polish Jewish culture. But the most interesting and useful information in this book is the reference material. The book contains maps of various sorts, showing not just geography but also demographic information. There are lists and photos, diagrams, and names, names and more names.
So many contributed
to the rich Jewish life in Poland that they are too great to mention. The section on famous figures and their contributions
is simply a list of names
and their contributions. This hardly does justice so giants like Shalom Aleichem and Isaac
Bashevis Singer, each one line entries under Yiddish and Hebrew Writers. Imagine that.
Almost a third of this book is a
glossary of Polish Jewry. Here you will find an alphabetical listing of some of the most significant locations and a paragraph
on each.
Though some of the entries are very thorough, I was disappointed in the number of items missing from this 100-page
section, particulary the religious references.
The chapter on major Jewish centers in Poland,
focuses on Cracow, Lodz, Lublin, and Warsaw. The book has an interesting chapter on tracing ones roots in Poland. It discusses
the types of documents that are helpful for tracing family members and the repositories in Poland where they can be found.
There is a list of modern day congregations and synagogues, striking in that it is two sides of a single page. There is another
section on current Jewish organizations, recommended reading and an index.
I suppose if such a rich topic as Poland's Jewish Landmarks had to be summed up in a portable paperback, this book does the job. But readers of this book should take the recommended reading section seriously, and use this book as just the start of a fascinating study.
Used price: $2.23

ABSOLUTELY FASCINATING- COULDN'T PUT THE BOOK DOWNReview Date: 1999-09-18
A fascinating story of suffering, well worth reading.Review Date: 1998-06-03

Used price: $17.62

Very enlighteningReview Date: 2007-05-06
Intriguing economic analysis of how fine art is soldReview Date: 2007-02-09

Excellent book on topic of Allied agents in WW2 HollandReview Date: 1998-02-24
Each agent was given a "security check" -- a "mistake" the agent was given to include in each morse radio message back to England. The absence of the "mistake" would signify to England that the agent had been captured and was sending messages under duress.
In March 1942, agent Hubertus Lauwers was captured and forced to signal under duress. Following his training, he omitted his security check. England failed to notice the omission and continued sending new agents to meet Lauwers. Each new agent, of course, was captured. Lauwers even risked his life to send the word "CAUGHT" and on a later occasion "WORKED BY JERRY SINCE MARCH SIXTH."
The British, through negligence and over-work, remained oblivious to these clear indications that Lauwers had been captured, for two years. All agents or information sent to him were captured by the Germans as well. This resulted in the capture and death of dozens of agents and partisans.
Reveals the SOE ops in HollandReview Date: 1999-08-31

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An exhaustive and unique guide to BrusselsReview Date: 1999-12-16
In short, this guide provides everything you'll need to have a first-rate experience in Brussels at any budget.
Good if you're just going to Brussels.Review Date: 1998-02-24
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In contrast to those who rationalize the sellout of Poland at Yalta through the west's imagined powerlessness, Himmler recognized the real basis of Soviet military successes: "Without American weapons and supplies, Russia would have been overwhelmed by our blitzkrieg and by the violence of our attack..." (p. 130).
As for Himmler's views on religion, Kersten comments: "Himmler was an outspoken antagonist of the Christian and especially the Catholic religion. This hostility towards Christianity has led him to take a systematic interest in other religions." (p. 148). In fact, Himmler thought highly of the eastern religions (p. 149, 151, 156) and of their concept of reincarnation (p. 154). Himmler foresaw the death of Christianity in Germany as one eventual outcome of Nazism: "The more our training takes root and men become infused with our spirit, the less they will depend on the churches--and one day they will be empty." (p. 136).
In recent decades, there have been accusations of the Church being indifferent to, if not complicit with, the Holocaust. Ironic to this, Himmler attributed much the same malevolence and power to the Catholic Church as he did to the Jews, and even believed that they were in cahoots: "In every crisis, you will trace the influence of two great world powers, the Catholic Church and the Jews. They're both striving for world leadership, basically hostile to each other, only united in their struggle against the Germanic peoples." (p. 155)
Libertines and hedonists sometimes try to tar modern traditionalism with the purported similarity of its views to that of the Nazis. This was far from the case. Himmler, for example, frowned upon sexual and marital monogamy (pp. 176-179), and had no problem with illegitimacy (p. 180). His opposition to homosexuality was primarily based on the fact that it discouraged procreation that would benefit the Reich (p. 57).
Himmler said that, not only was Heydrich of Jewish ancestry, but that Hitler used it to good Machiavellian effect to keep a man of Heydrich's talents in line. Furthermore, Heydrich was an ideal person to lead the extermination of the Jews because of the hatred of his own Jewish blood (pp. 97-99).
As for the Holocaust itself, Himmler claimed that, all along, he had been content with the emigration and resettlement of the Jews (pp. 119-120, 139, 162). Hitler, Bormann, and Goebbels were the ones who supposedly chose extermination (p. 164), deciding this before November 1941(p. 119)[which was at least two months before Wannsee].