Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad
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THE INSTANT SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER ‘Epic, moving and important’
ROBERT HARRIS''I''m not sure I''ve ever come across quite such a
revelatory account of the Holocaust and yet despite the horror and
the sadness it''s also a ''memoir of miraculous survival''. I
can''t recommend it enough'' ANTHONY HOROWITZ''A modern classic’
OBSERVER‘An unforgettable epic of a book’ DAILY MAILFrom
longstanding political columnist and commentator Daniel
Finkelstein, a powerful memoir exploring both his mother and his
father’s devastating experiences of persecution, resistance and
survival during the Second World War.Daniel’s mother Mirjam Wiener
was the youngest of three daughters born in Germany to Alfred and
Margarete Wiener. Alfred, a decorated hero from the Great War, is
now widely acknowledged to have been the first person to recognise
the existential danger Hitler posed to the Jews and began, in 1933,
to catalogue in detail Nazi crimes. After moving his family to
Amsterdam, he relocated his library to London and was preparing to
bring over his wife and children when Germany invaded the
Netherlands. Before long, the family was rounded up, robbed and
sent to starve in Bergen-Belsen.Daniel’s father Ludwik was born in
Lwów, the only child of a prosperous Jewish family. In 1939, after
Hitler and Stalin carved up Poland, Ludwik’s father was arrested
and sentenced to hard labour in the Gulag. Meanwhile, deported to
Siberia and working as a slave labourer on a collective farm,
Ludwik survived the freezing winters in a tiny house he built from
cow dung.Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad is a deeply moving, personal
and at times horrifying memoir about Finkelstein’s parents’
experiences at the hands of the two genocidal dictators of the
twentieth century. It is a story of persecution; survival; and the
consequences of totalitarianism told with the almost unimaginable
bravery of two ordinary families shining through.‘Danny Finkelstein
has written an elegant, moving account of the history of one
family, and in doing so shines light on the history of the 20th
century. If you want to understand Hitler and Stalin, read this
book about people whose lives were upended by both of them’ ANNE
APPLEBAUM, author of Gulag: A History, winner of the Pulitzer Prize