"This volume ventures to raise courageous, sometimes controversial questions about memory and the past and in doing so contributes to our understanding of the Holocaust and its legacy. It is recommended for all law libraries, Holocaust studies programs, and liberal arts collections." Susan Lee Pentlin, German Studies Review 27/2.
".the most impressive compendium of Holocaust scholarship ever published in Canada." Alan MacEachern, University Affairs
".an extremely important and lucid contribution to the study of the Holocaust. We congratulate you both on this impressive achievement." Selection Committee, The Canadian Society for Yad Vashem Award in Holocaust History
".illustrates the best of scholarly publishing." Selection Committee, Scholarly Book of the Year Award
"Like a painful intellectual buffet, this massive text has something for everyone.. there is much to ponder here; much to shudder over; much to move us to rage, action and resolve." Allan Gould, Edmonton Journal.
"an important contribution toward our comprehension of an event so horrific that it stands alone in our culture and memory.. the reader who is prepared to make the effort will come away a richer person." (Robert Wiersema, Quill & Quire)
"This collection. contains thirty-five thought-provoking essays by renowned scholars from a variety of disciplines, whose common aim is to examine the Holocaust phenomenon and its legacies. Their conclusions, while thoughtful and engaging, are also provocative and sometimes disturbing.... The Holocaust's Ghost is highly recommended reading." - Hilary C. Earl, University of Toronto Quarterly, Winter 2001/2002, Letters in Canada, vol 71:1
"This book is a must for any collection of materials on the Holocaust and an important addition to books on modern Jewish history and culture." Michlean Amir, Association of Jewish Libraries, Sept/Oct 2001
"This collection accomplishes the editors' goal of exploring the Holocaust as both history and a pedagogical possibility.... Overall, this is an excellent book and a welcome addition to any thoughtful reader's library." Candice Augustyn, Saskatchewan Law Review 2002