Two Rings: A Story of Love and War
Autor Millie Werber, Eve Kelleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 mar 2012
Judged
only
as
a
World
War
Two
survivor's
chronicle,
Millie
Werber's
story
would
be
remarkable
enough.
Born
in
central
Poland
in
the
town
of
Radom,
she
found
herself
trapped
in
the
ghetto
at
the
age
of
fourteen,
a
slave
laborer
in
an
armaments
factory
in
the
summer
of
1942,
transported
to
Auschwitz
in
the
summer
of
1944,
before
being
marched
to
a
second
armaments
factory.
She
faced
death
many
times;
indeed
she
was
certain
that
she
would
not
survive.
But
she
did.
Many
years
later,
when
she
began
to
share
her
past
with
Eve
Keller,
the
two
women
rediscovered
the
world
of
the
teenage
girl
Millie
had
been
during
the
war.
Most
important,
Millie
revealed
her
most
precious
private
memory:
of
a
man
to
whom
she
was
married
for
a
few
brief
months.
He
was—if
not
the
love
of
her
life—her
first
great
unconditional
passion.
He
died,
leaving
Millie
with
a
single
photograph
taken
on
their
wedding
day,
and
two
rings
of
gold
that
affirm
the
presence
of
a
great
passion
in
the
bleakest
imaginable
time.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610391221
ISBN-10: 1610391225
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: B/W photos throughout
Dimensiuni: 149 x 225 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1610391225
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: B/W photos throughout
Dimensiuni: 149 x 225 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Millie
Werberis
today
the
matriarch
of
a
close
and
loving
family.
After
moving
to
the
United
States
in
1946,
she
and
her
husband
Jack
raised
their
two
sons
in
Queens,
NY.,
where
together
they
built
a
real
estate
business.
They
lived
happily
together
until
Jack's
death
in
2006.
Millie
now
lives
on
Long
Island
surrounded
by
her
children,
grandchildren,
and
great-grandchildren.Eve
Kelleris
a
professor
and
director
of
graduate
studies
at
Fordham
University.
She
is
the
author
ofGenerating
Bodies
and
Gendered
Selves:
The
Rhetoric
of
Reproduction
in
Early
Modern
England,
and
is
a
past
president
of
the
Society
for
Literature,
Science,
and
the
Arts.
Recenzii
Kirkus Review
“Werber's story is wholly engrossing, written with exceptional immediacy and attention to detail… A deeply affecting addition to Holocaust literature.”
Booklist
“Among all the shelves of Holocaust memoirs, this book stands out for the quality of the spare, honest, passionate narrative of survivor Millie Werber… A story certain to spark discussion.”
The Weekender
“Every now and then a book comes along that so clearly draws the line between catastrophic devastation and minor nuisance that it's impossible to ignore… It is impossible to not be moved by the writing in this book, and it is impossible to not be awed by the fact that Werber's survival was simply based on luck, chance and, often, the kindness of others.”
American Jewish World
“Charmingly told… Millie kept much of this private for 60 years, until a son persuaded her to tell it to Keller. The result keeps you turning the pages.”
Jewish Week
“While she's decades younger than Alice Herz-Sommer, Millie Werber is also an inspiring figure. ‘Two Rings: A Story of Love and War,' which she wrote with Eve Keller (Public Affairs) is a beautifully written memoir of surviving the Holocaust as a teenager. Werber, who now lives on Long Island, reveals the unlikely heroes of her life, and also a powerful and tragic wartime love story that she had kept hidden in the years since.”
Anton Newspapers
“Werber and Keller movingly convey the hopelessness of being a teenager, a widow, and a factory worker at a Nazi-operated facility, with no end to the casual cruelty and violent deaths in sight. In addition, Werber's 1943 marriage, her time at Auschwitz in 1944, and subsequent relocation to Lippstadt, Germany in 1945 are covered in great detail and make for a compelling read.”
Sydney Morning Herald / The Age(Australia)
“A heartbreaking tale of lost love… These stories are tributes to those they loved and lost, and whom they want not to be forgotten…In between all of this are descriptions of the brutality in the camps. Ultimately, this will leave the biggest impression on readers, most of whom - like this one - will struggle to comprehend the evil that men and women are capable of perpetrating against others.”
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