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The Diary of Petr Ginz 1941-1942
The Diary of Petr Ginz 19411942
Author: Chava Pressburger (Editor), Elena Lappin (Translator)
Lost for sixty years in a Prague attic, this secret diary of a teenage prodigy killed at Auschwitz is an extraordinary literary discovery, an intimately candid, deeply affecting account of a childhood compromised by Nazi tyranny. As a fourteen-year old Jewish boy living in Prague in the early 1940s, Petr Ginz dutifully records the increasingly p...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780871139665
ISBN-10: 0871139669
Publication Date: 4/10/2007
Pages: 192
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 5

3.7 stars, based on 5 ratings
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press
Book Type: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 1
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Shervivor avatar reviewed The Diary of Petr Ginz 1941-1942 on + 97 more book reviews
The actual story of Petr Ginz is much better than his diaries. His diaries were written in the two years before he was sent to Terezin concentration camp in what is now the Czech Republic. Petr was a highly intelligent boy and it really makes you ponder how many people were murdered by the Nazis that may have gone on to do wonderful things for our world? Petr seemed to take the deportations calmy, or so his journal entries would have you believe. But he did stop writing in his diary a month or two before being deported, so it must have been much more stressful than he would lead a reader to believe. His sister, who survived Terezin, fills in many of the holes left in Petr's diary. He was also quite a good artist for someone so young and many pieces of his art survived the war. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in the Holocaust but it is not the usual gritty Holocaust survivor tale.


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