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A Crime in the Family
- A World War II Secret Buried in Silence - and My Search for the Truth
- Narrated by: Christopher Oxford
- Length: 8 hrs and 10 mins
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Publisher's summary
A memoir of brutality, heroism, and personal discovery from Europe's dark heart, revealing one of the most extraordinary untold stories of World War II
One night in March of 1945, on the Austrian-Hungarian border, a local countess hosted a party in her mansion, where guests and local Nazi leaders mingled. The war was almost over and the German aristocrats and SS officers dancing and drinking knew it was lost.
Around midnight, some of the guests were asked to "take care" of 180 Jewish enslaved laborers at the train station; they made them strip naked and shot them all before returning to the bright lights of the party. It was another one of the war's countless atrocities buried in secrecy for decades - until Sacha Batthyany started investigating what happened that night at the party his great aunt hosted.
A Crime in the Family is the author's memoir of confronting his family's past, the questions he raised and the answers he found that took him far beyond his great aunt's party: through the dark past of Nazi Germany to the gulags of Siberia, the bleak streets of Cold War Budapest, and to Argentina, where he finds an Auschwitz survivor whose past intersects with his family's. It is the story of executioners and victims, villains and heroes.
Told partly through the surviving family journals, A Crime in the Family is a disquieting and moving memoir, a powerful true story told by an extraordinary writer confronting the dark past of his family - and humanity.
Critic reviews
"Riveting" (Daily Express)
"Evocatively written with a sharp journalist's eye, A Crime in the Family lingers in the mind long after the final page is turned." (Literary Review)
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What listeners say about A Crime in the Family
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Buretto
- 08-02-19
More self-reflection than exposé, but not bad
The reviews on the Amazon sites alerted me to the idea that this would be more of a personal memoir than the story of a war atrocity, but I ventured forth anyway. The author presents several psychological points of view of war, occupation and dislocation, almost is if he's the first to have discovered them. In any case, it seems as if he's trying to formulate a unified theory of psychological trauma, bridging the three ideas of survivor's guilt, the systemic architecture of evils, great and small a society promotes, and the culpability of the disinterested bystander. There may be a tenuous equivalence in those, and the book does get a bit long-winded at some times, but not altogether uninteresting.
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