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Auschwitz: The Story of a Nazi Death Camp
Clive A. Lawton

Auschwitz: The Story of a Nazi Death Camp

Candlewick Press (MA) (Aug 22, 2002)
9780763615956
| Hardcover
48 pages | 222 x 290 mm | English
$ 18.99 | Value: $ 4.26
Dewey 940.531853858
LC Classification D805.5.A96 .L38 2002
LC Control No. 2001058115

Subject

  • Concentration Camps
  • Concentration Camps/ Poland
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)/ Juvenile Literature
  • Jews/ Persecutions/ Europe/ Juvenile Literature

Plot

Through startling first-person narratives, a rare collection of photographs, and expert storytelling, a renowned authority traces the history of Auschwitz from World War II to the present day. In less than ten minutes all the fit men had been selected. . . . Of the more than 500 others, not one was living two days later.- Primo Levi, Auschwitz survivorWhen they told us to undress, they made us feel like animals. The men were walking around and laughing and looking at us. I wanted the ground to open up and for me to be swallowed by it.- Lily Malnick, Auschwitz survivorBy the time they took us back to the barracks at night we could barely crawl. But we needed to show that we could still walk, that we were strong enough to give one more day. - Fritzie Fritshall, Auschwitz survivor Between March 1942 and January 1945, at least 1.5 million people were systematically murdered at Auschwitz. Some were sent to their death immediately upon arrival, some were sentenced to the slower, living death of slave labor, and some were the victims of gruesome medical experiments. In the middle of Europe and in the middle of the twentieth century, ordinary people, living ordinary lives, helped to do this. How did it happen? In this extraordinary resource for young readers, Clive A. Lawton provides a look at those who helped transform an abandoned army barracks into the notorious Nazi death camp known as Auschwitz, and of the countless men, women, and children who lost their lives there. Included are many photographs from what may be the only surviving photo album from Auschwitz, an album found, in a strange twist of fate, by a prisoner escaping from another camp - who discovered within the album's pages the faces of loved ones who had perished at Auschwitz.