You might enjoy 'The Order of the Day' by Éric Vuillard. It’s a short but powerful book about how German industrialists backed Hitler early on, showing complicity in a way that feels eerily familiar. It’s more vignette-style than 'Ordinary Men', but the themes overlap. Also, 'The Volunteer' by Jack Fairweather is about Witold Pilecki, who infiltrated Auschwitz, but it contrasts sharply with the perpetrator perspective—highlighting how some chose resistance instead. Both are stark reminders of how choices define us.
One book that really stuck with me is 'The Looming Tower' by Lawrence Wright. While it’s about the lead-up to 9/11, it has parallels to 'Ordinary Men' in how it examines the radicalization of seemingly normal individuals. The way Wright traces the paths of the hijackers and their mentors is both meticulous and terrifying.
Another lesser-known gem is 'The Railway Man' by Eric Lomax, a memoir about a POW tortured by the Japanese. It doesn’t focus on perpetrators per se, but the aftermath of cruelty and how ordinary soldiers justified their actions. The emotional weight of these stories lingers long after the last page.
If you're looking for books that delve into the psychology of ordinary people committing atrocities, like 'Ordinary Men', there are several gripping reads out there. 'Hitler’s Willing Executioners' by Daniel Goldhagen is a controversial but deeply researched take on how average Germans participated in the Holocaust. It’s more academic than 'Ordinary Men', but just as unsettling.
Another one I’d recommend is 'Machete Season' by Jean Hatzfeld, which interviews Rwandan perpetrators of genocide. The raw, unfiltered accounts make it a harrowing but essential read. It’s fascinating how these books show the banality of evil in different contexts, from Nazi Germany to Rwanda. Makes you question how thin the line really is between 'ordinary' and 'monstrous.'
I’ve always been drawn to historical accounts that explore how regular folks get swept into horrific acts. 'Soldaten' by Sönke Neitzel and Harald Welzer is a standout—it compiles secret recordings of German POWs during WWII, showing how casually they discussed war crimes. It’s chilling how mundane their conversations were, like they were talking about the weather.
For something more recent, 'Nothing to Envy' by Barbara Demick isn’t about perpetrators but about life in North Korea, and it has a similar vibe in showing how oppression becomes normalized. Both books leave you with this uneasy feeling about human nature.
2026-03-01 22:46:50
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