Boy: A Holocaust Story
Opis
A cobblestone road. A sunny day. A soldier. A gun. A child, arms high in
the air. A moment captured on film. But what is the history behind arguably
the most recognizable photograph of the Holocaust? In The Boy: A Holocaust
Story, the historian Dan Porat unpacks this split second that was
immortalized on film and unravels the stories of the individuals?both Jews
and Nazis?associated with it.
The Boy presents the stories of three Nazi criminals, ranging in status
from SS sergeant to low-ranking SS officer to SS general. It is also the
story of two Jewish victims, a teenage girl and a young boy, who encounter
these Nazis in Warsaw in the spring of 1943. The book is remarkable in its
scope, picking up the lives of these participants in the years preceding
World War I and following them to their deaths. One of the Nazis managed to
stay at large for twenty-two years. One of the survivors lived long enough
to lose a son in the Yom Kippur War. Nearly sixty photographs dispersed
throughout help narrate these five lives. And, in keeping with the
emotional immediacy of those photographs, Porat has deliberately used a
narrative style that, drawing upon extensive research, experience, and oral
interviews, places the reader in the middle of unfolding events.