Until deciding to devote himself full-time to writing, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen taught political science for many years at Harvard University. He is also the prize-winning author of the #1 international bestseller Hitler's Willing Executioners, and contributes to major newspapers and magazines around the world.
Kirkus Reviews
"Grisly specifics share space with an insightful, often startling
analysis of why mass murder occurs and how to stop it. A
significant achievement...intensely researched and wholly
original."
New York Times Book Review
"[A] magisterial and profoundly disturbing 'natural history' of
mass murder...We place the Holocaust outside of history; Goldhagen
embeds it in the larger, recurring pattern of genocidal
killing...Worse Than War is, in effect, Everyone's Willing
Executioners....Belief matters; choices matter. This is Goldhagen's
wake-up call...So far, the United Nations has done virtually
nothing to put [some] fine principles into action. Until it does,
those few states that are committed to preventing mass murder may
have to act without international approval. Worse Than War reminds
us of the imperative to act, and of the terrible cost of our
failure to prevent the mass murders of the past century."
"Kirkus Reviews"
"Grisly specifics share space with an insightful, often startling
analysis of why mass murder occurs and how to stop it. A
significant achievement...intensely researched and wholly
original."
"New York Times Book Review"
"[A] magisterial and profoundly disturbing 'natural history' of
mass murder...We place the Holocaust outside of history; Goldhagen
embeds it in the larger, recurring pattern of genocidal
killing..."Worse Than War" is, in effect, "Everyone's Willing
Executioners"....Belief matters; choices matter. This is
Goldhagen's wake-up call...So far, the United Nations has done
virtually nothing to put [some] fine principles into action. Until
it does, those few states that are committed to preventing mass
murder may have to act without international approval. "Worse Than
War" reminds us of the imperative to act, and of the terrible cost
of our failure to prevent the mass murders of the past century."
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