By Todd Shy
We know the Nazis either as monsters in jackboots or as banal bureaucrats just following orders. They are Auschwitz demons or Nuremberg fools.
Jonathan Littell’s sprawling novel “The Kindly Ones,” winner of two prestigious literary awards in France, makes a daring, disturbing attempt to deny such ethical shortcuts: “There was a lot of talk, after the war,” the book’s narrator observes, “in trying to explain what had happened, about inhumanity. But I am sorry, there is no such thing as inhumanity. There is only humanity and more humanity.”


