I'll check out Johnson, I'm curious now about what he has to say. I probably won't agree with him, but that's beside the point. and yeah, the Russell part seems a bit dubious, as far as I know, the majority of his work is well-respected, oft-cited and doesn't have much to do with criticisms of society. I can't say that re-reading Eichmann would be worth your time, not because it's not interesting, but cause her thesis is a small part of it, and most of her time is spent borrowing verbatim from The Destruction of the European Jews in regards to providing context for the climate surrounding Eichmann's time. That part was enlightening for me, having not really dig into much of the factual history of the Holocaust, but to support her claims it seemed a bit long-winded and sometimes tangential.