About the Author:
Barbara Rogasky has worked as an editor, author and photographer, but now devotes her time exclusively to writing. Her novel, "The Golem", illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman, received the National Jewish Book Award. Born in Delaware, she lives in Vermont. Rogasky revised her critcally acclaimed book, "Smoke and Ashes: The Story of the Holocaust", because "research into the Holocaust is ongoing...Much new information has come to light, figures have been revised, and the depth of participation by various groups has been newly understood." Yet there was another reason. Rogasky adds the book was "revised for the same reason it was written in the first place. The need still exists-perhaps greater than ever before-to remember. Remember, so that what is perhaps humanity's greatest organized horror will not and cannot ever happern again."
From Publishers Weekly:
Aimed at the same age group as Miriam Chaikin's recent A Nightmare in History, this book also examines Hitler's rise to power in the context of long-standing anti-Semitism, and the devastation and horror wrought by his policies of imprisoning and exterminating the Jews. Whereas Chaikin moved readers by fleshing out stories of individuals, Rogasky elicits considerable power from an unexpected sourcestatistics and lists, and the cold-blooded notations of officers carrying out their duties: "3208 people had to be transported three miles before they could be liquidated. . . . " She compares the numbers and aspects of other holocauststhose suffered by American Indians, Armenians, etc.to implore readers to understand what made this Holocaust unique. Other areas of focus include the late, inadequate response of the United States and United Kingdom, and the rise of anti-Semitism in the '80s. Most compelling is the attention given to rebellion and resistance by Jews; it stuns the imagination to read of the man who leaped from a body-filled pit to tear out the throat of an SS commander with his teeth. Perhaps the saddest statistic is the one revealing that many were too weak to live even when liberated. "In the areas freed by the Americans, French and British, 60,000 Jews were found alive. Within one week, 20,000 had died." Black-and-white photos from archival collections, documents and maps give this volume accessibility, and add to the tragic mood that pervades each set of sobering numbers. Ages 11-up.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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