Five Chimneys: The Story of Auschwitz
Editorial Reviews
Midwest Book Review
Having lost her husband, her parents, and her two young sons to the Nazi exterminators, Olga Lengyel had little to live for during her seven-month internment in Auschwitz. Only Lengyel's work in the prisoners' underground resistance and the need to tell this story kept her fighting for survival. She survived by her wit and incredible strength. Despite her horrifying closeness to the subject, Five Chimneys: A Woman Survivor's True Story of Auschwitz does not retreat into self-pit or sensationalism. When Five Chimneys was first published (two years after World War II ended), Albert Einstein was so moved by her story that he wrote a personal letter to Lengyel, thanking her for her "very frank, very well written book". Today, with "ethnic cleansing" in Bosnia, and neo-Nazis on the rise in western Europe, we cannot afford to forget the grisly lessons of the Holocaust. Five Chimneys is a stark reminder that the unspeakable can happen wherever and whenever ethnic hatreds, religious bigotries, and racial discriminations are permitted to exist.
Five Chimneys: The Story of Auschwitz,Olga Lengyel,Academy Chicago Publishers,0897333764,Biography,Biography / Autobiography,Essays,General,History,History: World,Holocaust,Hungary,Jewish Holocaust Personal Narratives,Military - World War II,Personal narratives, Hungarian,Prisoners and prisons, German,Prisoners of war,World War, 1939-1945,Europe,European history: Second World War,Jewish studies,Lengyel, Olga,The Holocaust
Books Report:
Recommended Books