Very nice and educational for people of all ages.I would recommend this to my friends.
View: mkgallagher1 - page 106
Very good.
Review from The Story of Civilization, Volume I →
Lebensborn Experiment
Review from The Lebensborn Experiment →
The Lebensborn Experiment was enjoyable for many reasons. First, the narrator does a wonderful job on the audio. Accents were spot on and all characters seemed to have a unique sound even though they all shared one voice. Second, the author has done a wonderful job of elaborating on the atrocities of the Nazi Regime..
I was so intrigued by the concept of this book that I looked up the name and I found out it is based on historical events. However, this book takes it to a whole other level. This is an intensely interesting story set during WWII, about the Germans trying to create a master race. What..
Caveat: I received a free copy of this audiobook from the author in exchange for this independent review. OK, now that that is out of the way, let’s take a quick critical look at this offering. It is not very good. The basics are OK I suppose, but the characters are cartoonish at best, and..
Very similar setting to the movie Overlord. While the story was quite short by my standards, (5-6 hours long) it still manages to not only flesh out the characters well but was an extremely enjoyable story. My greatest surprise though came at the end when I realized this has the potential to be a series!..
This book had a decent amount of potential. The idea behind it is that a substance is invented which allows the recipient the ability to enhance their strengths a significant amount. The setting is the waning days of World War II in Germany where a German scientist has developed a substance that can create these..
Set in Europe during WWII, “The Lebensborn Experiment” tells a story of young children stolen from their parents and taken to state-run orphanages, “graded” like livestock for Aryan traits, and adopted out to approved German families never to see their own families again or their parents ever discovering what happened to them. One boy, Adok,..
I realize this is a “story” version of the Bible and not the actual text, but there is a LOT of poetic license taken here. Right from the beginning, the author approaches this with his own doctrine and explains specifically how we should interpret certain scriptures. It’s not a problem if you agree with his..





