Showing posts with label nazis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nazis. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 April 2012

Book Jacket...each of us must read this tragic and moving true story ...

The diary of a young girl : a definitive edition
by Anne Frank, 1929-1945
Edited by Otto H. Frank and Mirjam Pressler
Translated from the Dutch by Susan Massotty.

Published:  New York : Doubleday, 1995.  340 pages.
Reading Appeal:  Young Adult

Emotionally intense                                        Compelling                                         Character-driven 

This true story is set in war torn Amersterdan, Netherlands.  World War II has ravaged Europe and the Germans have occupied the Netherlands.  The German Nazis are intent on eradicating all Jews from Europe by systematic placing them in concentration camps, death by starvation, brutality and the gas chamber.

Anne Frank, is a young Jewish girl living in Amsterdam when the Germans occupy the city.  Gentiles hide the Frank family in a secret compartment in an attic.  In this horrific and terrifying environment Anne pens her thoughts, feelings and daily happenings in a secret diary.

This diary survives World War II and has been published to tell the world of Anne Frank and her ordeal.

Strong sense of place                           Candid                               Heart-wrenching

Interesting titbit:  This publication is an uncut edition of Anne Frank's diary including entries originally omitted by her father and provides insight into Anne's relationship with her mother.

...it is important we all read Anne's Diary...lest we forget the Jewish Holocaust and those who lost their lives senselessly...

Link to Novelist

Anne Frank Musuem

Saturday, 21 April 2012

...read this...as it is one of my most memorable time travel adventures into World War II and the Jewish Holocaust...


The Boy in the striped pyjamas
by John Boyne


Published:  New York: David Flicking Books, 2006    224 pages.
Reading Appeal:  Young Adult

                Thought-provoking                                            Intricately plotted

This is a moving and haunting story set in Germany during World War II.  The year is 1942. 

The main character is a nine year old German boy called Bruno.  His beloved father, a Nazi Officer, is transferred to the country as the Commandant of the notorious concentration camp Auschwitz.  Bruno is constantly corrected by his mother and older sister Greta when he incorrectly pronounces the camp "Out-With".  
                                        Character-driven

Bruno is an innocent and naive young boy, but he is also extremely inquisitive and adventurous.  These character traits lead him to defy his parents wishes, continual disobedience and misadventures.  As a result Bruno becomes friends with a boy wearing striped pyjamas, called Shmuel, who lives behind the barb-wire fence of the camp.  Unfortunately, Bruno's misadventures place him and his friend Shmuel in extremely challenging and life threatening circumstances.

           Richly detailed                                                                Heart-wrenching

 
This is a must... an unputdownable read... a historical fiction story that you will think about for days...

Link to Novelist

Author: John Boyne

Friday, 20 April 2012

...a moving reading adventure...time travel to Germany during World War II and read this haunting novel about a ...


The Book Thief
by Markus Zusak

Published:  New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006.   552 pages
Reading Appeal:  Young Adult
    Haunting                                             Stylistically complex
This character-driven novel is narrated by DeathThe reader witnesses a world embroiled in war through the eyes of Death, an interesting character in the story.  Kindly and caring Death tells us about The Book Thief , who is a young orphan, a German girl called Liesel.


This historical fiction novel is set in a small German town, just outside of Munich, during World War II .  Liesel is fostered by the loving Rosa and Hans Hubermann.  Liesel suffers from frightening nightmares and Hans comforts her during these nightly ordeals by teaching her to read. 
          Coming-of-age                                 Lyrical                                         Moving
Hans, Rosa and Liesel save a Jewish man from certain death from the German concentration camps, by hiding him in their basement.  Rudy, a young boy next door, teaches Liesel to steal ... and the cycle of book stealing and daring adventures become a feature of Liesel's life in the midst of war-torn Germany...


...read this with focus and enjoy...


Novelist

Author: Markus Zusak


Thursday, 19 April 2012

...another reading adventure introduces us to ...


Someone named Eva
by Joan Wolf


Published:  New York : Clarion, 2007.  272 pages.
Reading Appeal:  Young Adult

Eye-opening                          Heart-breaking 

This moving and haunting story is about an 11 year old girl called Milada, who grew up in a small village called Lidice, Czechoslovakia.  Milada's family is torn apart when the German Nazis attack her village in 1942.
 Milada is selected for the Lebensborn program by the Nazis because she has blonde hair and blue eyes, the much admired Aryan features that Hiltler promotes as the "proper German" features.  Milada is kidnapped and transported to a school in Poland.  Her named is changed to Eva, she is taught to speak German and groomed to be adopted by a German family.  However, Milada/Eva is a clever young girl and she despite her traumatic experiences she never forgets her true name and her family history.
   Masterfully written                       Fascinating                            Memorable


...I guarantee this fast paced novel will keep you glued to the pages from beginning to end...


Novelist


Estrella Amarillo

...read this novel and time travel to a reading adventure in Poland, 1939...

Yellow star
by Jennifer Roy

Published:  London : Frances Lincoln Children's, 2009
Reading Appeal:  Young Adult

The facts behind the title of this novel:  During World War II, from 1939 to 1945, the Nazis forced the Jewish population to wear a yellow star on their clothing to indicate to everyone they were Jewish.
       Thought-provoking                         Moving                                        Memorable
This is a fictionalised true story based on factual information about the life of Sylvia Perlmutter.  After the war Syliva moved to the United States, married and after a number of years recounted her story to her neice, the author Jennifer Roy.

This is her story...in 1939 the Germans invaded the town of Lodz, Poland, and moved the Jewish population into a small part of the city called a ghetto. As the war progressed, 270,000 people were forced to settle in the ghetto under impossible conditions.

At the end of the war, there were about 800 survivors. Of those who survived, only twelve were children. This is the story of one of the twelve.

                                        First-person narrative                Courageous
Sylvia entered the ghetto when she was 4 years old and was liberated when she was 10 years, surviving the ordeal for almost six years.

...you have to read this to experience the courageous spirit of survival in one so young...

Jennifer Roy