The Boy Who Followed His Father into Auschwitz: A True Story of Family and Survival by
Jeremy Dronfield
My rating:
4 of 5 stars
I received an ARC of this book through a Goodreads Giveaway.
This
book was very educational. While reading this I realized just how much
teachings about the Holocaust in school is sugar coated. Notwithstanding
the the subject matter, this book was written in a way that made it an
enjoyable read. Sometimes I find that non-fiction books read like a
boring history text book, but this was good.
Each point of view
change is denoted with a Hebrew phrase. I had to go to a translator to
find out what the phrases meant. To assist anyone else wondering what
the phrases are, I have included them below:
אבא – father
משפחה – family
בת – daughter
בן – son
אמא – mother
דוד – uncle
אח – brother
בן דוד – cousin
אחים – siblings
אם וכת – if so
אכ וכן – oh yes
**
Please note: I do not speak, read, or write Hebrew. I am neither a
linguist nor an expert in languages. If anything is inaccurate, please
let me know. **
I read this book as part of the PopSugar Reading Challenge 2020 - A book with more than 20 letters in its title.
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