Shadows of Survival
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Kristine Rosenthal Keese
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Author / Editor information
Reviews
"Kristine Keese survived childhood in the Warsaw Ghetto but when she arrived in New York in 1946 at the age of 12, her new classmates did not believe what she had suffered. Seventy years later, with astounding detail and clarity, she tells her story in Shadows of Survival, a Child’s Memoir of the Warsaw Ghetto ... Some of her experiences are those of any child — being so engrossed in her library books that she allows the dinner to burn, for instance. Others are drastically different — such as walking home from a bread-buying expedition and having the loaf, still in her mother’s hand, bitten by a starving child."
Gerald Isamann, The Camden Review October 2016:
"Thousands of miles – and gallons of water – separate a mansion in a little town on Cape Cod, in Massachusetts, and a house in Hampstead. Yet they were amazingly linked last week with the publication of a slim paperback called Shadows of Survival ... [Keese] decided that she needed to write her story for the sake of her children’s inheritance, for future generations so they would honour the endurance of others."
Natasha Lehrer, Times Literary Supplement, February 23 2017:
"A fine honest memoir...devastation is lodged in the accumulated detail, one of the reasons publications such as this are so important."
Marci Shore, Associate Professor of History, Yale University:
“Twelve-year-old Kristine arrived in New York City in 1946. When she tried to tell her story to her new American schoolmates they did not believe her. Seventy years later she tells the story she had thought best to put aside then. With uncanny sobriety and a wondrous memory for visual detail, Kristine Keese narrates her time in the Warsaw Ghetto and later as a hidden child on the so-called “Aryan Side.” She revisits the eight year-old girl wearing high heels and a kerchief so that she could go to work beside her mother. She writes of her mother’s ingenuity, her stepfather’s coldness, and the surreal view of brightly-colored flowers from the bridge in the Warsaw Ghetto. Keese’s self-reflective attempt to understand what was humanly possible has meaning far beyond the particularities of Germans, Jews and Poles during the Second World War. In her story, told with no melodrama and no self-pity, we see the universal through the particular.”
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
vii -
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Introduction
viii -
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1. My Personal War
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2. 1939: The Clouds of War
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3. November 1940– July 1942: The Ghetto, First Stages
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4. The Ghetto, Last Stages
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5. The End of Safety
42 -
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6. Jasio’s Story and Leaving the Ghetto
50 -
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7. Times of High Anxiety
55 -
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8. August–October 1944: The Warsaw Uprising
76 -
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9. Leaving Warsaw
88 -
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10. Waiting for the War to End
94 -
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11. Spring 1945: Return to the Convent
106 -
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12. Living with Genia in Lodz
113 -
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Afterword: What is Left???
120 -
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Photos and Documents
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