The book thieves The Nazi looting of Europe's libraries and the race to return a literary inheritance

Anders Rydell, 1982-

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Published
New York, New York : Viking [2017]
Language
English
Swedish
Main Author
Anders Rydell, 1982- (author)
Other Authors
Henning Koch, 1962- (translator)
Physical Description
xiii, 352 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 317-336) and index.
ISBN
9780735221222
  • Foreword
  • 1. A Fire That Consumes the World: Berlin
  • 2. Ghosts at Berliner Stadtbibliothek: Berlin
  • 3. Goethe's Oak: Weimar
  • 4. Himmler's Library: Munich
  • 5. A Warrior Against Jerusalem: Chiemsee
  • 6. Consolation for the Tribulations of Israel: Amsterdam
  • 7. The Hunt for the Secrets of the Freemasons: The Hague
  • 8. Lenin Worked Here: Paris
  • 9. The Lost Library: Rome
  • 10. Fragments of a People: Thessaloniki
  • 11. The Mass Grave Is a Paper Mill: Vilnius
  • 12. The Talmud Unit: Theresienstadt
  • 13. "Jewish Studies Without Jews": Ratibor-Frankfurt
  • 14. A Wagon of Shoes: Prague
  • 15. A Book Finds Its Way Home: Berlin-cannock
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

The Nazis burned books, but they also collected vast numbers of them. That is, they expropriated them from private libraries, bookstores, and homes in the countries they occupied and from individuals they persecuted. Swedish journalist Rydell asserts that the goal of the seizures was twofold. Of course, the Nazis wished to suppress the expression of liberal and democratic ideas. But they also hoped to foster an opposing intellectual tradition based on the primacy of race. Immediately after the war, there was no concerted effort to track down these books and return them to their rightful owners. Many somehow wound up in various public library systems in Germany. Rydell himself attempted to return one of these books to its owner. His effort as well as the efforts of various librarians to do the same form the core of an interesting and often poignant story that traverses Europe and should appeal to general readers, especially those who treasure books.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Most Nazi misdeeds are infamous and well documented, including their book burnings and their plunder of great European art. Rydell draws attention to a lesser-known crime, the Nazis' book theft. They ransacked homes, libraries, and stores, sending stolen books back to Nazi research libraries. They targeted Jews, Leftists, and Freemasons. After World War II, most of the stolen books remained piled in warehouses, with some in public library circulation. Rydell set out to follow the looters' trail to understand why and to find out what remains. Along the way, the author participated in modern efforts by passionate librarians to locate owners and descendants, exploring in varying depth each group targeted. While the displaced collections may not be of great monetary value, they hold monumental significance to the original owners. Rydell's writing style matches the emotional attachment we have to books, both as personal possessions and symbols of freedom and equality. VERDICT This vigorous, complete, and personal account of a body of historical research previously absent in literature is a must for readers who enjoyed Robert Edsel's The Monuments Men and those who seek out more obscure World War II topics.-Heidi Uphoff, Sandia National Laboratories, NM © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An erudite exploration of the systematic plundering of libraries and book collections by Nazi invaders.Looting books by mainly Jewish owners, collections, and libraries was an effective way of stealing Jewish memory and history, as this thorough work of research by Swedish journalist and editor Rydell attests. From early bonfires of objectionable publications (by Thomas Mann and Stefan Zweig, among others) in Berlin in May 1933, staged by enthusiastic German student federations, to the desecration of synagogues and sacred texts on Kristallnacht to the methodical plundering of libraries in occupied areas during the war, Rydell ably delineates the spiraling destruction, city by city: Berlin, Munich, Amsterdam, Paris, Rome, Thessaloniki, Vilnius, Prague, etc. The Nazis believed libraries needed to be "cleaned up" and "un-German" literature destroyedi.e., "degenerate," "Communist," Free Mason, and "Jewish" works. As the author emphasizes, however, the Nazis were not anti-intellectual; on the contrary, they were building a whole new "intellectual being, who did not base himself on values such as liberalism and humanism, but rather on his nation and race." The most valuable books (e.g., antique and medieval works) were claimed by chief Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg's plundering organization, ERR, which grew into a frightening international organization focused on confiscating "thoughts, memories, and ideas" and enlisted intellectuals and academics as librarian foot soldiers. Rydell considers the millions of volumes confiscated, such as the priceless Yiddish library in Vilnius, essentially the repository for Ashkenazi history and culture. In the "model" concentration camp Theresienstadt, Hebrew scholars were saved from immediate murder by being forced to catalog the thousands of confiscated books in what was called the Talmud Command. Rydell visited many of the rehabilitated libraries (which are still sorting the stolen books), and he traces some of the volumes that have since been returned, such as a cherished book belonging to Berliner Richard Kobrak, deported with his wife to the gas chambers in Auschwitz in 1944.An engrossing, haunting journey for bibliophiles and World War II historians. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.