There are glimpses of Mengele joking with the children, taking them on outings, hugging them. One especially disturbing aspect of the book is the fact that some of the victims remember Mengele as a charming father-substitute in whom they yearned to place their trust. The authors have interviewed several of the surviving twins and here present their stories, including details of their postwar lives. Only 160 of them were alive when the Russians liberated Auschwitz in 1945. During the war he subjected some 3000 twins, mostly young, to experiments of unspeakable horror. Mengele was in charge of the ``selection process'' at the death camp Auschwitz, but he was also a genetic scientist with a special interest in twins.
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