Roman's journey : a memoir of survival / Roman Halter ; preface by Martin Gilbert

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Arcade Pub. : Distributed by Hachette Book Group USA , c2007.Edition: 1st North American edDescription: xii, 338 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9781559708548
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 940.5318 HAL
LOC classification:
  • DS134.72.H35 A3 2007
Summary: "An unforgettable memoir that has been acclaimed a masterpiece and a work of moral grandeur, Roman's Journey is the mesmerizing true account of one man's impossible misfortune and improbable good luck in surviving the Holocaust. As Sir Martin Gilbert writes in his preface, "The full panoply of evil is here." But there is also a profound and moving lesson of hope." "Roman Halter was a schoolboy in a small town in western Poland when in 1939 he and his family gathered behind the curtains to watch their German neighbors greet the arrival of Hitler's armies with kisses and swastikas. Within days, the family home had been seized, twelve-year-old Roman had become a slave of the local SS chief, and, returning from an errand, he witnessed his Jewish classmates being bayoneted to death by soldiers at the edge of town. So began his remarkable six-year journey through some of the darkest caverns of Nazi Europe - including the Lodz ghetto and the Auschwitz and Stutthof concentration camps - that claimed the lives of every other member of his family and the eight-hundred-strong community of his boyhood. Surviving the firebombing of Dresden, where he was a slave laborer, he managed to escape from an SS death march and lasted out the end of the war in hiding with a brave German couple, only to return to his native village to find it completely transformed."--BOOK JACKET.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Libro - Monografía Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. 940.5318 HAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 045296

"An unforgettable memoir that has been acclaimed a masterpiece and a work of moral grandeur, Roman's Journey is the mesmerizing true account of one man's impossible misfortune and improbable good luck in surviving the Holocaust. As Sir Martin Gilbert writes in his preface, "The full panoply of evil is here." But there is also a profound and moving lesson of hope." "Roman Halter was a schoolboy in a small town in western Poland when in 1939 he and his family gathered behind the curtains to watch their German neighbors greet the arrival of Hitler's armies with kisses and swastikas. Within days, the family home had been seized, twelve-year-old Roman had become a slave of the local SS chief, and, returning from an errand, he witnessed his Jewish classmates being bayoneted to death by soldiers at the edge of town. So began his remarkable six-year journey through some of the darkest caverns of Nazi Europe - including the Lodz ghetto and the Auschwitz and Stutthof concentration camps - that claimed the lives of every other member of his family and the eight-hundred-strong community of his boyhood. Surviving the firebombing of Dresden, where he was a slave laborer, he managed to escape from an SS death march and lasted out the end of the war in hiding with a brave German couple, only to return to his native village to find it completely transformed."--BOOK JACKET.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

415 15 20293 |  info@labibliotecapublica.org | Newsletter |                                                       f |


contador pagina