Review
`Monumental debut 'The Kindly Ones' may be the most anticipated literary novel of the year' --Waterstone's Books Quarterly
*
`The Kindly Ones is a sophisticated literary exploration of morality and evil. A masterpiece of historical fiction'
Review
"The biggest novel this month, and an essential read [...] remorseless, obsessive and compelling."
Review
"The book rises impressively, even magnificently, to its own occasions."
"Jonathan Littell has created a phenomenon, not least because of his exceptional achievement.
"Jonathan Littell has created a phenomenon, not least because of his exceptional achievement.
Book Description
"This is a powerful insight into a tortured mind."
Prospect Magazine, March 2009
"An extraordinary work, deserving of the praise heaped upon it."
Marie Claire, March 2009
"Littell's novel is not an enjoyable read, but it is, arguably, an essential one."
Scotland on Sunday
'Littell's triumph raises the question: why have the French become fascinated with the oppressor rather than the victim?'
New Statesman
'Jonathan Littel has written a remarkable novel, expertly translated from the original French by Charlotte Mandell'
Intelligent Life
'With it's painstaking descriptions of mass executions, Littell's tale holds a ghastly fascination.'
Product Description
This Faustian story with a terrifying twist is the fictional memoir of Dr. Max Aue, a former SS intelligence officer, who has reinvented himself as a family man and owner of a lace factory in post-war France. Max is an intellectual steeped in philosophy, literature, and classical music. He is also a cold-blooded assassin and the consummate bureaucrat, who speaks out now not in self-justification but to set the record straight. He looks back at his life with cool-eyed precision: from a disrupted childhood and a turning point in his student days, to his role as observer and then participant in Nazi atrocities on the Eastern Front, from Poland to the Caucasus; he is present at the siege of Stalingrad, at the death camps, and finally caught up in the rout of the Nazis and the nightmarish fall of Berlin.Although Max is a totally imagined character, his world is peopled by real historical figures such as Eichmann, Himmler, Goring, Speer, Heydrich, Hoss, and Hitler himself. Massive in scope, terrifying in subject matter, and shocking in its protagonist, Littell's masterpiece is intense, hallucinatory, and terrifyingly compelling. Described by Le Figaro as 'a monument of contemporary literature', this transgressive work has been compared to classics of world literature, including War and Peace. A huge novel about the seductive enormity of evil, the ineffable horror of war, man's inhumanity and the malevolence of the Furies, this is a book that every thinking person should read and to which no one can be indifferent.
About the Author
Jonathan Littell was born in 1967 in New York of American parents and brought up and educated mainly in France. This novel, originally published in France as Les Bienveillantes, became a bestseller and won the coveted Prix Goncourt and the Academie Francaise's Prix de Litterature. Previously he worked for the humanitarian agency, Action contre la faim, in Bosnia, Chechnya, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. He now lives in Spain.