[4] Since 2019, she has been a member of the French scientific council to the Inter-Ministerial Delegation to Combat Racism, Anti-Semitism, and Anti-LGBT Hate (fr).
Using archival materials as well as interviews with people involved in Holocaust denial like Maurice Bardèche, Robert Faurisson, Roger Garaudy, Pierre Guillaume, and Jean-Claude Pressac, Igounet narrates the spread of Holocaust denial in France from immediately after the end of World War II, demonstrating how it was facilitated both by the extreme right-wing press and also some sources on the French far left.
[6] Olivier Lalieu, a historian at the Mémorial de la Shoah Holocaust museum in Paris, wrote that the chapters related to the activities of Robert Faurisson are the most innovative, both in their descriptions of his relationship with Pierre Guillaume and the role of the extreme left.
[7] Shortly after the book's release, Robert Redeker predicted that it would become the main reference work in the subject of the history of Holocaust denial in France.
[11] To the historian Stéphanie Courouble-Share, this biography captured deceptions by Faurisson sufficiently well to dispel the ambiguity that had previously characterised the public understanding of him.