<p>The motivation for the book is compellingly personal, but the writing is objective, clear, and persuasive.</p>
New York Times Book Review
<p>It is bound to influence the thinking of the American reader who believes in the worth of human life and the dignity of the animal called Man.</p>
San Francisco Chronicle
<p>Koestler with his usual clarity presents the arguments for capital punishment and then destroys them.</p>
Kirkus Reviews
<p>Perhaps the most disquieting part of this story of judicial conservatism is the treatment of the insane, guilty of capital crimes. . . . [An] exhaustive analysis of the whole problem of capital punishment.</p>
New Republic
<p>A notable work of the humane intelligence . . . Koestler pleads his case, which would be as pertinent in our states that allow capital penalties as it is in England, with force and fervor.</p>
New Yorker
<p>The arguments against hanging put forward by Koestler are not new. . . . These points have been made before, but can seldom have been advanced with more conviction or a heavier supply of confirming evidence. . . . Even a hangman could hardly fail to admire this impassioned ingenuity.</p>
Atlantic Monthly
<p>[A] brilliant polemic.</p>
New Criterion
<p>His criticisms are always caustic, sometimes bitter. His opposition to ‘legal homicide’ is unwavering and his logic often devastating. . . . <i>Reflections on Hanging</i> deserves wide attention and careful examination.</p>
America
<p>[A] brilliant contribution to the campaign for the abolition of hanging in Britain.</p>
Time
<p><i>Reflections on Hanging</i> stands as a bitter indictment of society’s demand that the old biblical precept ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth’ should be interpreted literally to the extent of capital punishment.</p>
Atlanta Constitution
<p>Powerfully marshals the evidence to prove the error and the stupidity of the arguments that have been advanced to support capital punishment.</p>
Saturday Review
<p>Koestler writes with all his well-known novelistic skill when he is giving us case studies of murderers. He also has a nice turn for irony.</p>
The Freeman
<p>Impassioned, eloquent appeals for the removal of an immoral, inhuman, and ineffective form of punishment.</p>
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Om bidragsyterne
ARTHUR KOESTLER (1905–1983) was a novelist, journalist, essayist, and a towering public intellectual of the mid-twentieth century. Writing in both German and English, he published more than forty books during his life. Koestler is perhaps best known for Darkness at Noon, a novel often ranked alongside Nineteen Eighty-Four in its damning portrayal of totalitarianism.