The Holocaust Books
Penguin Publishing Group The Absent Moon
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£15.30
Random House USA Inc Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust The First Original
Book SynopsisDerived by the author from interviews and oral histories, these eighty-nine original Hasidic tales about the Holocaust provide unprecedented witness, in a traditional idiom, to the victims' inner experience of 'unspeakable' suffering. This volume constitutes the first collection of original Hasidic tales to be published in a century.'An important work of scholarship and a sudden clear window onto the heretofore sealed world of the Hasidic reaction to the Holocaust. Its true stories and fanciful miracle tales are a profound and often poignant insight into the souls of those who suffered terribly at the hands of the Nazis and who managed somehow to use that very suffering as the raw material for their renewed lives.' -- Chaim Potok'A beautiful collection.' -- Saul Bellow'Yaffa Eliach provides us with stories that are wonderful and terrible -- true myths. We learn how people, when suffering dying, and surviving can call forth their humanity with starkness and clari
£12.34
Penguin Putnam Inc The Cut Out Girl A Story of War and Family Lost
Book SynopsisCOSTA BOOK OF THE YEAR AWARD WINNER“The hidden gem of the year . . . Sensational and gripping, and shedding light on some of the most urgent issues of our time, this was our unanimous winner.” —Judges of the 2018 Costa AwardThe extraordinary true story of a young Jewish girl in Holland during World War II, who hides from the Nazis in the homes of an underground network of foster families, one of them the author's grandparentsBart van Es left Holland for England many years ago, but one story from his Dutch childhood never left him. It was a mystery of sorts: a young Jewish girl named Lientje had been taken in during the war by relatives and hidden from the Nazis, handed over by her parents, who understood the danger they were in all too well. The girl had been raised by her foster family as one of their own, but then, well after the war, there was a falling out, and they were no longer in touch. What was the girl's side of
£14.45
McClelland & Stewart Inc. Child of the Holocaust
Book SynopsisBeautifully and evocatively rendered, this memoir endures as an example of post-war narrative at its finest.Jankele Kuperblum was just nine years old when he returned home and found his family gone. The night before, Germans had come to his town in rural Poland and taken away all the Jews. Now alone in the world, he has to change his name, forget his language, and abandon his religion in order to survive. Jack wanders through Nazi-occupied Poland for four years with no place to hide and no one to trust.
£13.46
Schiffer Publishing Ltd Graphic History of Antisemitism
Book SynopsisThere are two groups of Jews in the world: the Jews who are no different than any other people and the Jews who are figments of imagination and defined by misleading stereotypes. The second group is the fantasy of the antisemite and they are the subject matter of this book. American and European antisemitism is seen through a rare and unique collection of postcards, letters, newspapers, advertisements, and cartoons captured in over 270 photos. The thought-provoking text explores the motives for creating these derogatory materials and the rationale for buying them. Although antisemitism is but one of many hateful and bigoted human beliefs, it stands alone as the most vicious; its existence is the longest of its kind in human history; and its consequences have been fatal for millions. Antisemitism is humankind at its worst. That hatred, in whatever form, makes victims of us all.
£33.29
RosettaBooks End of a Berlin Diary
£19.76
Henry Holt & Company Inc The Holocaust A History of the Jews of Europe
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£29.06
Schocken Books All Rivers Run to the Sea Memoirs Memoirs of Elie
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£13.95
Kensington Publishing The Ghost Tattoo
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£22.40
Beacon Press Mans Search for Meaning
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£25.16
Beacon Press Yes to Life In Spite of Everything
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£15.92
Teachers' College Press Becoming a Holocaust Educator Purposeful
Book SynopsisToday's teachers seek to address the Holocaust not just as history, but also in relation to current events. Featuring stories from middle, high school, and university classrooms across the US, this collection offers a comprehensive argument for the inclusion of purposeful Holocaust pedagogy rooted in literacy practices and historic content.
£30.35
Northwestern University Press The Black Seasons Jewish Lives
Book SynopsisRecalling his experience of the ghetto at six years old, Michal Glowinski, attentive to the distance between a child's experience and an adult's reflection, revisits the images and episodes of his childhood. He explores the horror of those years, the fragility of existence, and the fragmented nature of memory itself.
£57.00
Northwestern University Press Lessons and Legacies X Reexamining Perpetrators
Book SynopsisThe essays in the tenth volume of Lessons and Legacies offer a sense of the issues that run through current thinking about the Holocaust and ideas about the different ways we engage with a broad range of sources. New sources ranging from traditional archival finds to microhistories accessible via newer technology infuse Holocaust research. At the same time, the fields of Holocaust research and Jewish studies have an increasing impact upon other disciplines. Overall, the editor and writers find that the integration of insights, methodologies, critiques, and questions from psychology, literary studies, visual arts, and other fields with those of history, political science, and other social sciences sharpens the tools of analysis. The essays in this volume testify to the evolution of the field of Holocaust studies and also indicate a future direction.The essays in the tenth volume of Lessons and Legacies offer a sense of the issues that run through current thinking about the Holocaust andTable of ContentsContents Theodore Zev Weiss Foreword Sara R. Horowitz Introduction I Wartime Sources of Interpretation Gerhard L. Weinberg Another Look at Hitler and the Beginning of the Holocaust Ana Antic Police force under occupation: Serbian State Guard and Volunteers' Corps in the Holocaust Gershon Greenberg Jewish Mystical Thought (Kabbalah) Through the Holocaust Paul B. Jaskot ""Realism""? The Place of Images in Holocaust Studies II Rethinking Testimony Henry Greenspan Collaborative Interpretation of Survivors' Accounts: A Radical Challenge to Conventional Practice Gary Weissman Incapable of Revealing the Event: Elie Wiesel and the Reading of Memoir-Writing III Victimhood, Identity, Practice Cora Granata Political Upheaval and Shifting Identities: Holocaust Survivors in the Soviet Occupied Zone of Germany, 1945-1949 Joanna Beata Michlic The Aftermath and After: Memories of Child Survivors of the Holocaust Valerie Hébert From Nuremberg to Kigali: On the Necessity and Impossibility of Post-Atrocity Justice IV Art Matthew Girson Reflections, Traditions, and Representations From a Painting Studio Notes on Contributors|Contents Theodore Zev Weiss Foreword Sara R. Horowitz Introduction I Wartime Sources of Interpretation Gerhard L. Weinberg Another Look at Hitler and the Beginning of the Holocaust Ana Antic Police force under occupation: Serbian State Guard and Volunteers' Corps in the Holocaust Gershon Greenberg Jewish Mystical Thought (Kabbalah) Through the Holocaust Paul B. Jaskot ""Realism""? The Place of Images in Holocaust Studies II Rethinking Testimony Henry Greenspan Collaborative Interpretation of Survivors' Accounts: A Radical Challenge to Conventional Practice Gary Weissman Incapable of Revealing the Event: Elie Wiesel and the Reading of Memoir-Writing III Victimhood, Identity, Practice Cora Granata Political Upheaval and Shifting Identities: Holocaust Survivors in the Soviet Occupied Zone of Germany, 1945-1949 Joanna Beata Michlic The Aftermath and After: Memories of Child Survivors of the Holocaust Valerie Hébert From Nuremberg to Kigali: On the Necessity and Impossibility of Post-Atrocity Justice IV Art Matthew Girson Reflections, Traditions, and Representations From a Painting Studio Notes on Contributors
£116.10
Northwestern University Press The Inability to Love Jews Gender and America in
Book SynopsisThe Inability to Love borrows its title from Alexander and Margarete Mitscherlich's 1967 landmark book The Inability to Mourn, which discussed German society's lack of psychological reckoning with the Holocaust. Challenging that notion, Agnes Mueller turns to recently published works by prominent contemporary German, non-Jewish writers to examine whether there has been a thorough engagement with German history and memory. She focuses on literature that invokes Jews, Israel, and the Holocaust. Mueller's aim is to shed light on pressing questions concerning German memories of the past, and on German images of Jews in Germany at a moment that is ideologically and historically fraught.
£103.30
The Catholic University of America Press The Papacy the Jews and the Holocaust
Book SynopsisExplores various issues surrounding the relationship between the papacy and the Jews in the modern age.Trade ReviewIn this important study, Frank J. Coppa surveys the long history of Jew hatred in the Roman Catholic tradition, the positive and negative role of the papacy therein, and the relationship between the Catholic brand of Jew hatred, so called anti-Judaism, and anti-Semitism.... Coppa's fine book marks the beginnings of a new brand of scholarship on the role of Jew hatred in Roman Catholic and Holocaust history. - Church History ""Coppa has produced what must rank as one of the clearest and most nuanced studies to be had.... The special quality and unique character of this study is Coppa's constant attempt to balance the actions and inaction of the papacy.... Anyone interested in the papacy in the 20th century or in the moral stances of the historical church will find it essential reading."" - Italian Quarterly ""In his introduction to this book, Frank J. Coppa declares that his purpose is to 'provide a historical account of the relationship between the papacy and the Jews in the modern age.' In eight long, fact-filled chapters, Coppa does just that."" - American Historical Review ""Coppa's study is... the best available, single-volume survey of the relationship in the modern period between the papacy and the Jews."" - Theological Studies
£28.95
MW - Rutgers University Press You Shall Tell Your Children Holocaust Memory in
Book SynopsisReferences to the Holocaust are some of the most common additions to contemporary haggadot. Is it possible to find any redemptive meaning in the Nazi genocide? Are we adding value to this unforgivable moment in history? This work looks at the controversial topic and explains both sides of the debates.
£31.00
John Wiley & Sons Child Survivors of the Holocaust The Youngest
Book SynopsisOver ninety percent of Europe’s 1.5 million Jewish children were murdered during the Holocaust, but a tiny fragment of about 150,000 children survived. Cohen traces the postwar lives of these children, shedding new light on the way their experiences and perceptions both during and after the war shadowed and shaped their lives through adulthood.Trade Review"A little-known, sometimes disturbing, but fascinating history about children, families and the Holocaust." -- Diane L. Wolf * professor of sociology, University of California-Davis *"Cohen's unique and original study is an important, empathetic story of child survivors, a group who profoundly influences the direction of Holocaust memory and education today." -- Avinoam Patt * author of Finding Home and Homeland: Jewish Youth and Zionism in the Aftermath of the Holocaust *“Extremely well written and thoughtful, dealing respectfully and empathetically with the important and often neglected issue of child survivors…Cohen enables a range of voices to be heard." -- Fraenkel Prize Committee * Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust & Genocide *"New Scholarly Books: Weekly Book List, May 25, 2018" by Nina C. Ayoub * Chronicle of Higher Education *"The work deepen[s] existing survivor scholarship, will be useful for cross-national comparisons, and will add to Jewish history and American immigration history." * Choice *"Cohen has made an important and original contribution to the historiography of children and war and Jewish children in the Holocaust and suggests a number of new areas that deserve further study." * The American Historical Review *Table of ContentsTable of Contents Abbreviations Prologue Introduction Chapter 1 Liberation: “My Hell began after the War” Chapter 2 “Our Greatest Treasures”: America Responds Chapter 3 In America: “War Orphans Find Home” Chapter 4 No Happy Endings: Postwar Reconstituted Families Chapter 5 Growing Up in America: Lingering Memories and the US Context Chapter 6 Where was God? Faith and Doubt among Child Survivors Chapter 7 “Finding a Voice for our Silence”: Claiming Identity as Child Survivors Conclusion “Memory is the Arena of Healing”: The Road to Repair Acknowledgements Bibliography Index About the Author
£999.99
MJ - Ohio University Press Auschwitz Poland and the Politics of
Book SynopsisFew places in the world carry as heavy a burden of history as Auschwitz. Remembered as the most prominent site of Nazi crimes, Auschwitz has had tremendous symbolic weight in the postwar world. Auschwitz, Poland, and the Politics of Commemoration is a history of the Auschwitz memorial site in the years of the Polish People’s Republic.Trade Review“Jonathan Huener has written a magnificent book that will become mandatory reading for everyone interested in the Holocaust, Polish History, Jewish History, or the study of collective memory and commemoration…. This book is full of provocative insights and fascinating analysis, and is certain to generate a great deal of debate and discussion.”“Auschwitz, Poland, and the Politics of Commemoration is ... a fascinating and engaging study that makes an important contribution to our understanding of the controversy over memory at Auschwitz and is a highly welcome addition to the growing body of literature on twentieth-century Polish-Jewish relations.” * Slavic Review *
£50.08
Vallentine Mitchell A History of the Holocaust
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£37.53
Vallentine Mitchell & Co Ltd Holocaust Memoir Digest Volume 1
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£23.34
Vallentine Mitchell & Co Ltd Holocaust Memoir Digest v2 A Digest of Published
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£23.54
Vallentine Mitchell & Co Ltd HOLOCAUST MEMOIR DIGEST A Digest of Published
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£22.51
Academy Chicago Publishers Mother and Me
Book SynopsisJulian's mother was a spoiled beauty, a Warsaw socialite who had no talent for child-rearing and no interest in it. She turned her son completely to his governess, a Catholic, whom he called Kiki, and whom he loved with all his heart. Kiki was worried about Julian's immortal soul, explaining that he could go to Heaven only if he became a Catholic.
£17.06
Chicago Review Press Better Days Will Come Again
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£23.79
Schaffner Press Inc The Lost Childhood The Complete Memoir
Book SynopsisThis compelling memoir takes readers through the eyes of a child surviving World War II in Nazi-occupied Poland. As a nine-year-old, the author witnessed his father being herded into a truck--never to be seen again. He, his mother, and sister fled to Warsaw to live in disguise as Catholics under the noses of the Nazi SS, constantly fearful of discovery and persecution. A sobering reminder of the personal toll of the Holocaust on Jews during World War II, this book is a harrowing portrait of one child's loss of innocence. This edition contains previously unpublished content from the original text.
£14.14
Solomon-Berl Media The Rose Temple
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£19.76
£17.95
Henry Holt & Company Inc Killing the SS The Hunt for the Worst War
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£21.84
St Martin's Press Cold Crematorium
Book SynopsisA lost classic of Holocaust literature translated for the first timefrom journalist, poet and survivor József DebreczeniAs immediate a confrontation of the horrors of the camps as I've ever encountered. It's also a subtle if startling meditation on what it is to attempt to confront those horrors with wordsDebreczeni has preserved a panoptic depiction of hell, at once personal, communal and atmospheric. New York TimesA treasure...Debreczeni's memoir is a crucial contribution to Holocaust literature, a book that enlarges our understanding of ''life'' in Auschwitz. Wall Street JournalA literary diamond...A holocaust memoir worthy of Primo Levi. The Times of LondonIt should be required reading. Jonathan Safran Foer, author of Everything Is IlluminatedA timely reminder of man''s inhumanity to man. Jung Chang, author of Wild SwansJózsef Debreczeni, a prolific Hungar
£22.40
Square Fish A Delayed Life
Book SynopsisA Delayed Life is the breathtaking memoir that tells the story of Dita Kraus, the real-life Librarian of Auschwitz.Dita Kraus grew up in Prague in an intellectual, middle-class Jewish family. She went to school, played with her friends, and never thought of herself as being differentuntil the advent of the Holocaust. Torn from her home, Dita was sent to Auschwitz with her family.From her time in the children's block of Auschwitz to her liberation from the camps and on into her adulthood, Dita's powerful memoir sheds light on an incredible lifeone that is delayed no longer.
£17.09
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Red Orchestra
Book SynopsisTable of ContentsRevised Edition Introduction Prologue 1. Great Goes to America 2. Greta and Adam 3. Berlin 4. The Masses and the Media 5. Things Fall Apart 6. The Takeover 7. Denial and Compliance 8. Going to Ground 9. The Prague Express 10. The Gentlemen's Club 11. A Faraway Country 12. The Dinner Party 13. The Birthday Party 14. The Inner Front 15. 'The New Order' 16. All Possible Foolish Rumors 17. The Road to Barbarossa 18. Other Worlds 19. 'Distress About Germany's Future' 20. The Antiwelle 21. Crime and Punishment 22. The Survivors 23. Life in a Cold Climate Acknowledgements Notes Select Bibliography Index
£33.20
Pen & Sword Books Ltd A Tailor in Auschwitz
Book SynopsisExceptional collaboration of a scientific researcher and a relative of a survivor of the Holocaust.
£22.00
Random House USA Inc The Nuremberg Interviews An American
Book SynopsisDuring the Nuremberg trials, Leon Goldensohn—a U.S. Army psychiatrist—monitored the mental health of two dozen Germans leaders charged with carrying out genocide. These recorded conversations went largely unexamined for more than fifty years, until Robert Gellately—one of the premier historians of Nazi Germany—made them available to the public in this remarkable collection. Here are interviews with the likes of Hans Frank, Hermann Goering, Ernst Kaltenbrunner, and Joachim von Ribbentrop—the highest ranking Nazi officials in the Nuremberg jails. Here too are interviews with lesser-known officials essential to the inner workings of the Third Reich. Candid and often shockingly truthful, The Nuremberg Interviews is a profound addition to our understanding of the Nazi mind and mission.
£16.96
Free Press Salas Gift
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£999.99
Rowman & Littlefield A World Erased
Book SynopsisThis poignant memoir by Noah Lederman, the grandson of Holocaust survivors, transports readers from his grandparents' kitchen table in Brooklyn to World War II Poland. In the 1950s, Noah's grandparents raised their children on Holocaust stories. But because tales of rebellion and death camps gave his father and aunt constant nightmares, in Noah's adolescence Grandma would only recount the PG version. Noah, however, craved the uncensored truth and always felt one right question away from their pasts. But when Poppy died at the end of the millennium, it seemed the Holocaust stories died with him. In the years that followed, without the love of her life by her side, Grandma could do little more than mourn. After college, Noah, a travel writer, roamed the world for fifteen months with just one rule: avoid Poland. A few missteps in Europe, however, landed him in his grandparents' country. When he returned home, he cautiously told Grandma about his time in Warsaw, fearing that the past wouTrade ReviewAs a youth, Lederman was only vaguely aware of the history of his grandparents as Holocaust survivors. In Lederman’s close, loving extended family in America, questions to his grandparents on the topic were usually deflected. As an adult, a trip to Holocaust-related sites in eastern Europe triggered an intense interest in Lederman for his family’s experiences. His now-widowed grandmother, perhaps as a form of therapy, slowly but with vivid detail finally revealed her story, and the result is this harrowing and deeply shocking if sometimes uplifting account. This is a wide-ranging memoir, covering the vibrant, prewar Jewish life in Poland, the Nazi-imposed Jewish ghetto and subsequent extermination camps, the postwar confinement in displaced person camps, and the move to America. In passionate and sometimes hate- filled invective, his grandmother lashes out at her Nazi persecutors but also at many goyim, Poles whom she describes as viciously anti-Semitic. If there is a hero here, it is Lederman’s grandmother, who consistently displays remarkable courage and resilience in the face of horrible traumas. This is a vital contribution to Holocaust collections. -- Jay Freeman * Booklist *Noah Lederman . . . offers a compelling third-generation perspective on the Holocaust, the survivors, and their families. He craves the details about death camps and ghettos that gave his grandparents nightmares. Part travelogue into the Europe of former concentration camps and his grandparents’ native Poland, part quest for the ugly truths he was shielded from as a child, Lederman’s narrative opens with the death of his grandfather, and the urgent need to learn, delicately, from his grandmother what he can before her stories die with her. * The Philadelphia Inquirer *Have you ever read a memoir that you couldn't put down? They are rare, but I've found one: A World Erased.... Noah Lederman is an excellent writer, and not only shares family memories, but his journey to understand the lives of his grandparents—what they survived during the Holocaust—and how that affected the rest of their lives. It is powerful, moving, and I have never read a memoir that held my attention so much that I couldn't sleep; turning out the light at 6am when the sun was rising, as I turned the last page, I felt bereft at finishing, awe at Lederman's words and story, and love for his family.... Highly recommended. * Wandering Educators *In A World Erased, author Noah Lederman seeks to find for himself the stories of his survivor grandparents who are reluctant to tell him anything but the most gentle versions of what occurred. After a fact-finding trip to Europe, what transpires unlocks the full narrative: the unrelenting horror during that period but also the extreme resilience which gives the author a whole new context to his family. * Southern Jewish Life Magazine *Lederman makes us both laugh and cry as we read, and this may very well be the Holocaust book of the year. * Reviews by Amos Lassen *Lederman’s dogged persistence in getting his grandparents to recount their memories of the Holocaust pays off brilliantly. In A World Erased, he rescues their stories—and the stories of so many who survived, and so many who didn’t—and turns their experiences during the Holocaust into an enduring monument for his own generation and those to follow. -- Wayne Hoffman, executive director, Tablet Magazine, and author of Sweet Like Sugar and An Older ManNoah Lederman’s superbly written memoir has the emotional impact of a great novel but resonates with the truth of his own experience as the grandson of Holocaust survivors. It’s the story of a young man coming to terms with familial memory as he travels the world and finds his own place in it. This is a moving and important book. -- Phyllis T. Smith, Author of I Am LiviaA World Erased is a book of dark tales that is suffused with tenderness on every page. As the number of Holocaust survivors dwindles, Lederman's journey of remembrance makes for urgent reading. -- Sam Apple, author of Schlepping through the AlpsThis gripping book traces the evolution of a young man's quest to uncover the stories of his grandparents’ harrowing past—a riveting journey through repressed memory, unspeakable trauma, and the landmarks of European genocide that lead the author to a fresh understanding of his family's wartime past and his own identity. A determined historian, dogged sleuth, and gifted storyteller, Lederman flecks his memoir with black humor and refreshing candor, illuminating how the horrors of the Holocaust are transmitted through the generations. -- Andrew Jacobs, director of Four Seasons LodgeTable of ContentsChapter 1 The Holocaust through Nightmares Chapter 2 Super Poppy and the Meshugge Grandma Chapter 3 The Hospital Chapter 4 Keys to the Holocaust Vault Chapter 5 Adrift Chapter 6 Death in the Czech Republic Chapter 7 The E-mail Chapter 8 Otwock Chapter 9 From Night to Dawn Chapter 10 Peering into the Vault Chapter 11 The Tapes Chapter 12 Panama Chapter 13 Escape from Warsaw Chapter 14 Revision Chapter 15 A Box of Photos Chapter 16 The Four Questions Chapter 17 Israel Chapter 18 Research at Yad Vashem Chapter 19 Poisonous DNA Chapter 20 The Boy at the Gates of Warsaw Chapter 21 Lightning Lad Chapter 22 Escape from Treblinka Chapter 23 The Liquidation Chapter 24 Grandma’s Determination Chapter 25 Get Well Soon Chapter 26 The Bronze Arm Chapter 27 Bergen-Belsen Chapter 28 Better and You Better Chapter 29 Umschlagplatz Chapter 30 The Mystery Camp Chapter 31 A Return to the Camps Chapter 32 Majdanek Chapter 33 Birkenau Chapter 34 Auschwitz Chapter 35 The Buna Chapter 36 Liberation Chapter 37 In Search of New Beginnings Epilogue Acknowledgments Sources About the Author
£18.04
Simon & Schuster Suzannes Children A Daring Rescue in Nazi Paris
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£17.10
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Escape From Auschwitz
Book SynopsisOn 6 November 1942 70 captured Red Army soldiers staged an extraordinary mass escape from Auschwitz. Among these men was prisoner number 1418 Andrey Pogozhev. He survived, and this is his story. Pogozhev was caught by the Germans in 1941 and was sent to Auschwitz. The fact that Pogozhev survived the appalling conditions in the camp is remarkable in itself. That he should also have taken part in one of the few successful escapes makes his gripping narrative rare indeed. His description of the escape and his subsequent journey as a fugitive to the east, through the Carpathian mountains into the Ukraine, is unforgettable reading.
£18.99
Rowman & Littlefield War and Genocide
Book SynopsisIn examining one of the defining events of the twentieth century, Doris L. Bergen situates the Holocaust in its historical, political, social, cultural, and military contexts. Unlike many other treatments of the Holocaust, this revised, third edition discusses not only the persecution of the Jews, but also other segments of society victimized by the Nazis: Roma, homosexuals, Poles, Soviet POWs, the disabled, and other groups deemed undesirable. In clear and eloquent prose, Bergen explores the two interconnected goals that drove the Nazi German program of conquest and genocidepurification of the so-called Aryan race and expansion of its living spaceand discusses how these goals affected the course of World War II. Including firsthand accounts from perpetrators, victims, and eyewitnesses, her book is immediate, human, and eminently readable.
£103.86
Grand Central Publishing Last Stop Auschwitz: My Diary of Survival in
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£16.14
PublicAffairs Come to This Court and Cry: How the Holocaust
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£24.00
PublicAffairs The Holocaust: A New History
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£20.89
Fitzhenry & Whiteside People in Auschwitz
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£14.20
Vehicule Press The Veiled Sun: From Auschwitz to New Beginnings
Book SynopsisA Holocaust memoir from Paul Schaffer, who survived Auschwitz to become a successful industrialist, honored by the country of FranceBy the age of 14, Paul Shaffer had received a comprehensive education in Vienna. He spent his teenage years, first on the run from the Nazis in Belgium and France, and then in Auschwitz from 1942 to 1945, and survived to become a successful industrialist who was honored by the government of France. The carefully chosen vignettes and descriptions in this Holocaust memoir provide insights into a middle-class Jewish childhood in prewar Vienna, attitudes to Jewish refugees in Vichy France, arrest and detention in France, survival in Auschwitz, and the return to postwar France to face the challenges of reintegration into French society. With photos of the author in the Siemens factory where he worked as an inmate, this emotional memoir is an attempt to comprehend those events and examine the range of human behavior he himself witnessed. Shaffer’s account was written with students in mind, and consequently deliberately omits detailed descriptions of the most horrifying aspects of life as a concentration camp inmate.
£16.16
Exile Editions We Left the Camp Singing
Book Synopsis2018 marks the tenth anniversary of an International Congress that gathered in Ghent to celebrate and discuss the work of Etty Hillesum, a woman who died in Auschwitz, whose diaries and letters have been translated into 67 languages. She is unquestionably one of the most singular voices from the Holocaust. But most in our country have never heard of her. So, who was Etty Hillesum? She was a Dutch Jew who died at the age of 29, leaving behind deeply moving, intellectually profound diaries and letters written during the last two years of her life under Nazi occupation. We only have these works because she threw them from a train on her way to the death camp. This volume is their visionary responses to Etty Hillesum.
£16.16
Barricade Books Inc Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical
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£21.79
Paragon House Publishers Different Voices: Women and the Holocaust
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£29.72
Paragon House Publishers The Road to Hell: Recollections of the Nazi Death
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£10.99