I don't really like any of them. Some of the "classics" in PDF format are available for free at the vho.org website. I haven't read any of them cover to cover. The Germer Rudolf books are practically unreadable.
If I had to recommend just one, it's probably Butz's The Hoax of the Twentieth Century. It provides a good overview but it's out of date so it doesn't discuss more recent trends in holocaust scholarship. In his discussion of the Auschwitz myth he notes the importance of the Buna factory and his belief that the plant was photographed by aerial reconnaissance during the war. We learned he was right a few years later when the photos were released but his book doesn't discuss them.
He discusses the role of the Zionists in developing the extermination thesis. But I don't recall any mention of the Haavara. He spends too much time talking about the absurdities found in the Talmud and suggests that the hyperbole found there is a possible source for the exaggerations of the holocaust. This ignores the fact that all religious have some pretty stupid premises at their core and that the Talmud has influenced ideas found in Christianity and Islam as well as Judaism. In doing so he misses how galut--which is specific to Jews--is a prism through which the world is interpreted. He runs the risk of being called an anti-Semite if he were to delve into the galut issue. But the fact that the mass media has disgorged chicken little tales of Jewish misery intermittently since the turn of the century--very often with six million being the number of Jews in peril--cannot be dismissed as irrelevant. Since it's true, it can't be anti-Semitic.
His explanation of what happened to Jews who are missing reveals as much about his personal success with women as it does insight into the missing Jews. And his book was written before we had this geyser of memoirs spewing onto the bookshelves so he doesn't discuss any of the nonsense like Filip Mueller or Mischa that makes the traditional story more and more untenable.
But it's valuable because it explains what really happened to the Jews in Europe in the 1940s as we understood it in 1975. The holocaust in 2010 is a completely different animal but we can't fault Butz for not predicting the way the story would change.
I would also recommend any of the books that have been written to answer holocaust revisionism. Questions raised by revisionists piqued my curiosity but it was Shermer, Lipstadt, and van Pelt who told me that there aren't any answers to those questions.
You truly are a kook.
This is an excerpt from a verdict in which some SS dude was punished for excessive cruelty, isn't it? Am I thinking of something else? In any case, it doesn't look good. It could support an extermination thesis but without seeing the entire statement I can't say.
If you give me a quote without any context, I'll dismiss it with a hand wave. If you insist that the meaning of a sentence is independent of the entire document and set of documents then you need to take some remedial social science research classes.
The meaning is quite clear even in the excerpted quote, and was so comprehended up thread by ElMondoHummus.
You posted an excerpt that was an explicit admission of a formal structure and organization for the execution of Jews, as well as an admission of the existence of procedural rules ("Although the accused should have recognized that the extermination (Vernichtung) of the Jews was the duty of Kommandos which were set up especially for this purpose, he should be excused for considering himself to have the authority to take part in the extermination of Jewry himself"). And you did it to address his specific request:
Now you insist on context.
Then by all means, head to the library and look up 'The Good Old Days' edited by Ernst Klee et al for the rest of the text. See if that changes anything in how these lines can be interpreted. Or look up an article in Holocaust & Genocide Studies by Yehoushua Buechler which examines that context; you can probably find it online by googling Max Taubner (although it is correctly spelt with an umlaut). It's further discussed in other articles also in HGS by Juergen Matthaeus, entitled 'Controlled Escalation'. To grasp the context, one would have to read up on SS disciplinary procedures and probably on SS ideological training as well. Matthaeus, Breitman and Kwiet edited a useful collection of essays entitled Ausbildungsziel Judenmord?
The context, as you would learn, is that Taubner bragged about his killings and flashed pictures of them around; his maintenance platoon had not been ordered to carry out mass executions, and this became noticed because of his bragging. His parent formation, the 1st SS Infantry Brigade,
was tasked with carrying out mass executions - but not only was his subunit not so tasked, he endangered the reputation of the Waffen-SS by yapping about it. This was after his platoon was returned to its garrison base in Poland in a spell out of the frontline. That was when he was arrested.
Taubner was actually prosecuted by the SS for ignoring service instructions, breaching military discipline, not for killing Jews. He couldn't be prosecuted for that since it would subvert the entire framework of the SS's activities. That is why the excerpted quote came into being.
That much was obvious to ElMondoHummus just reading the excerpt at face value. The judgement stated that
the extermination (Vernichtung) of the Jews was the duty of Kommandos which were set up especially for this purpose, and thereby confirms the existence of a policy of extermination.
It's far from the only document to do so, as you'd know if you were a truly diligent reader of even just a few books on the Holocaust. A policy of extermination, you said, should leave many documents relating to its existence. It should 'ripple' out and leave all manner of traces. This is one of them - it shows that the policy of extermination created administrative difficulties and incited SS men such as Taubner to exceed orders, which risked breaching military discipline.
For the exact same reason, the Wehrmacht had its doubts about the so called Barbarossa decree, or Kriegsgerichtsbarkeitserlass. This order, issued at Hitler's behest, exempted any Wehrmacht soldier from punishment for killings of civilians in reprisals unless these killings risked military discipline.
Taubner's case is far from exceptional - there are several others almost exactly like it, for example the prosecution of a Feldgendarmerie NCO who had assisted Sonderkommando 4a in executions, who then carried out his own unauthorised executions, and was tried for it. The judgement in that case came to a similar conclusion
"So sind auch die Erschiessungen von Juden durch den SD letzlich Akte des Staaten, der die Austilgung dieser Feinde in einer bestimmten Art und Weise anordnet und ebenso durchfuehren laesst. Fuer diese vom Staat fuer notwendig gefundenen Massnahmen sind eigens Organe eingesetzt. Diese Organe sind in sich wieder straffen Satzungen unterworfen." ~ Feldurteil des Reichskriegsgerichts vom 17.4.1942 gegen den Unteroffizier der Feldgendarmerie Hans Roettgermann.
There are, in fact, many orders issued to Army units reminding them that measures against Jews are the responsibility of the SD, not to take part in executions, which many did as 'volunteers' and execution tourists, and not to take photographs, which many also did, as Taubner had.