Description

Book Synopsis

Poland, January 1945. Two women and four men escape from a Nazi death march. Each is from a different background and a different country, but all have endured the horrors of imprisonment in Auschwitz. They find refuge in an abandoned factory, and suddenly they realize that they are no longer mere numbers. Even in their wild euphoria at being free, however, they can have no certainty about their future.
This is a tale of exploding joy within a hothouse of fear, a tale of human beings erupting into life after breaking free of the embrace of death an unusual and moving tale that cements Albert Maltz''s reputation as a compassionate observer of character and one of the finest storytellers of his generation.



Trade Review
The narration is from the point of view of two women, one French, the other Dutch, whom the Nazi have widowed. The style is touchingly simple… their hopes and fears of rehabilitation come across convincingly and his background details are painfully vivid * Times Literary Supplement *
Though it’s a short novel, one becomes deeply involved… There is real anguish in the sudden tragedy that overtakes them in the end * Irish Times *
[A Tale of One January] has an inevitability that is wholly acceptable * The Times *
A Tale of One January is dark, rosy, and thrilling. In it there is not only death, but also an unexpected degree of wit, and a sexual tension that permeates throughout their time hiding out in an abandoned brick factory * Jacobin Magazine *

A Tale of One January

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    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Poland, January 1945. Two women and four men escape from a Nazi death march. Each is from a different background and a different country, but all have endured the horrors of imprisonment in Auschwitz. They find refuge in an abandoned factory, and suddenly they realize that they are no longer mere numbers. Even in their wild euphoria at being free, however, they can have no certainty about their future.
    This is a tale of exploding joy within a hothouse of fear, a tale of human beings erupting into life after breaking free of the embrace of death an unusual and moving tale that cements Albert Maltz''s reputation as a compassionate observer of character and one of the finest storytellers of his generation.



    Trade Review
    The narration is from the point of view of two women, one French, the other Dutch, whom the Nazi have widowed. The style is touchingly simple… their hopes and fears of rehabilitation come across convincingly and his background details are painfully vivid * Times Literary Supplement *
    Though it’s a short novel, one becomes deeply involved… There is real anguish in the sudden tragedy that overtakes them in the end * Irish Times *
    [A Tale of One January] has an inevitability that is wholly acceptable * The Times *
    A Tale of One January is dark, rosy, and thrilling. In it there is not only death, but also an unexpected degree of wit, and a sexual tension that permeates throughout their time hiding out in an abandoned brick factory * Jacobin Magazine *

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