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Leap Into Darkness
Michael Olesker | Leo Bretholz

Leap Into Darkness

seven years on the run in wartime Europe

Anchor (Sep 14, 1999)
9780385497053
| Paperback
288 pages | 132 x 202 mm | English
$ 15.95 | Value: $ 3.99
Dewey 940.5318092
LC Classification DS135.A93 .B74 1999
LC Control No. 99031373

Subject

  • France
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
  • Jews
  • Jews/ Persecutions/ Austria/ Vienna
  • Vienna (Austria)

Plot

A harrowing, action-packed account of the author's series of audacious escapes from the Nazis' Final Solution--"riveting...a fascinating and moving piece of history" (Library Journal).Young Leo Bretholz survived the Holocaust by escaping from the Nazis (and others) not once, but seven times during his almost seven-year ordeal crisscrossing war-torn Europe. He leaped from trains, outran police, and hid in attics, cellars, anywhere that offered a few more seconds of safety. First he swam the River Sauer at the German-Belgian border. Later he climbed the Alps on feet so battered they froze to his socks--only to be turned back at the Swiss border. He crawled out from under the barbed wire of a French holding camp, and hid in a village in the Pyrenees while gendarmes searched it. And in the dark hours of one November morning, he escaped from a train bound for Auschwitz.Leap into Darkness is the sweeping memoir of one Jewish boy's survival, and of the family and the world he left behind.