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Rudolf Höss: The Commandant of Auschwitz and the Architecture of Industrialised Murder
On 16th April, 1947, a wooden gallows stood in the shadow of the crematorium at Auschwitz I. A small group of witnesses, including former prisoners, gathered quietly. The man led forward had once commanded this camp. He had lived in a villa within sight of the chimneys. His children had played in a garden where ash sometimes fell from the sky. His name was Rudolf Höss . The story of Höss is not only a biography of a war criminal. It is a study in how ideology, bureaucracy, ob


Wet Noses in No Man’s Land: The Bravery of Mercy Dogs, Battlefield Rescuers of World War I and Beyond
In the mud of the Western Front, a cold nose could mean rescue. Mercy dogs searched no man’s land for the wounded, carrying first aid and guiding medics through shell craters. Thousands of lives were saved by instinct and quiet courage. Read the full story.


Christopher Lee: The Tallest Man in the Room and the Most Unexpected Life in British Cinema
From witnessing the last public guillotine execution in France to recording heavy metal at 91, Christopher Lee’s life was stranger and richer than his most famous roles.
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