Minister of Death; The Adolf Eichmann Story
New York: The Viking Press, 1960. Presumed First Edition/First Printing. Hardcover. x, 246 pages. Illus. (62 photographs)., DJ scuffed: small tears, small pieces missing. Quentin James Reynolds (April 11, 1902 – March 17, 1965) was a journalist and World War II war correspondent. As associate editor at Collier's Weekly from 1933 to 1945, Reynolds averaged twenty articles a year. He also published twenty-five books, including The Wounded Don’t Cry, London Diary, Dress Rehearsal, and Courtroom, a biography of lawyer Samuel Leibowitz. He also published an autobiography, By Quentin Reynolds. Katz and Aldouby were both ex-members of an Israeli underground movement, devoted for many years to the compilation of the most complete dossier of Eichmann in existence. Photographs, affidavits, testimonies, were gathered together; secret Nazi documents, even Eichmann’s tape-recorded ‘memoirs’, were traced, ‘borrowed’, copied and studied – and, on the capture of their subject, were placed in the hands of Quentin Reynolds. The result is this most authoritative and unique book. A biography which traces the life from schooldays to a well guarded prison in Israel of an insignificant Nazi who became Hitler's Minister of Death. More