This definitely ranks up there with one of the best books I have ever read. True to its title, this book takes a look at our current prevalent Culture of Death and gives in-depth descriptions of individuals and movements that have brought us to where we are now. One thing that suprised me was to see a few people (such as Charles Darwin) who had often been seen by society as harmless, only for this book to describe the full extent of his writings and what their implications were. Don't skip over this page, this is too good a book for anyone to pass up.
I saw the authors of this book interviewed on EWTN and realized that I had to read it. As I thought, we've been lied to; this book illustrates the extent and breadth of the culture of untruth. It is important to understand something of the childhood of any person, expecially culturally and politically persons. With this information, one can estimate how thinking got skewed. Knowing that Sanger hated her father, and probably her mother for forcing her (Margaret) to do all the housework, lends to a comprehension of her disdain of babies--she had to do all the work as a little child! Furthermore, her father hated the Church; so she grew in that direction, too.
Alas, there should have been an evaluation of that antiChrist, Hugh Heffner. Only once, and all too quickly, did I see on a TV biography that when young he had been dumped by a girl--he sure got even with women!