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Hardcover HHhH Book

ISBN: 0374169918

ISBN13: 9780374169916

HHhH

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Acceptable*

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Book Overview

HHhH: "Himmlers Hirn heisst Heydrich," or "Himmler's brain is called Heydrich." The most dangerous man in Hitler's cabinet, Reinhard Heydrich was known as the "Butcher of Prague." He was feared by all and loathed by most. With his cold Aryan features and implacable cruelty, Heydrich seemed indestructible--until two men, a Slovak and a Czech recruited by the British secret service, killed him in broad daylight on a bustling street in Prague, and thus changed the course of History. Who were these men, arguably two of the most discreet heroes of the twentieth century? In Laurent Binet's captivating debut novel, we follow Jozef Gabcik and Jan Kubis from their dramatic escape of Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia to England; from their recruitment to their harrowing parachute drop into a war zone, from their stealth attack on Heydrich's car to their own brutal death in the basement of a Prague church. A seemingly effortlessly blend of historical truth, personal memory, and Laurent Binet's remarkable imagination, HHhH --an international bestseller and winner of the prestigious Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman--is a work at once thrilling and intellectually engrossing, a fast-paced novel of the Second World War that is also a profound meditation on the nature of writing and the debt we owe to history. HHhH is one of The New York Times' Notable Books of 2012.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

If you don't know anything about historical research IT'S NOT FOR YOU

I love this book not just for the narrative of two WWII Czech and Slav heroes parachuting in to kill the Butcher of Prague but because of the way Binet writes in short segments, bouncing between past and present of writing the book and the villains, heroes, and bureaucrats of WWII. Anyone who has had to do research understands that a lot of choices have to be made about how much you have to lie to fill in the gaps when not all the data is present. It's sympathy. Additionally how the author writes doesn't hide behind fictionalization. Hundreds of thousands of people were executed by believers and opportunists, murders were systematically designed by brilliant fools, and the book shows just how cruel a mundane chauvinist looking for a promotion can be.

Awful!

Binet goes to extraordinary and sadly very successful lengths to make a book about World War 2 heroes instead about what a terrible author he is. He spends more pages whining about writing the book than actually telling the story. Truly one of the worst and, frankly, most embarrassing books I’ve ever read.
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