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Tatae's Promise

Based on the True Story of a Young Woman's Escape from Auschwitz

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This never-before-told true story of a young woman's escape from Auschwitz with her sister is a remarkable tale of unimaginable courage, family, faith and enduring love.

"...readers will admire Hinda's devotion to her family and her determination to resist her Nazi captors as they attempt to dehumanize her. There's also a remarkable love story at the heart of this novel—a relationship that will surprise and delight readers for its ability to withstand the most terrible of circumstances... A moving work..."
─Kirkus Reviews

Hinda was eighteen years old when an axe crashed through the front door of her home in Poland. Nazi soldiers swarmed inside and herded the family into an army truck and hauled them away for one lone reason: They were Jews. World War II and the Hitler-induced Holocaust was in full swing.

"With its added value of emotional and atmospheric richness, Tatae's Promise is a 'must have' acquisition for any library looking at high-quality fiction and nonfiction accounts of Polish Jewish history, concentration camp experience, and the power of survival. These explorations will also attract book clubs interested in selecting and contrasting a few quality titles on all these subjects, powered by an oral history that comes to life through solid literary excellence and collaborative determination.
─Midwest Book Review

"Hinda Mondlak's story is nothing short of extraordinary... Inspired by her father's promise and last words to her just before his execution—'You will live; you will tell'—this riveting adaptation urgently demands only one thing from us: we must listen!"
─Eli Rubenstein, religious leader, Congregation Habonim Toronto; National director, March of the Living Canada; director, International March of the Living; Appointed to the "Order of Canada" by the Governor General of Canada

"This moving and suspenseful book tells the story of Hinda Mondlak, who escaped from Auschwitz with her sister. Based on hours of her taped testimony, it describes in rich detail every phase of the persecutions she endured—Nazi occupation, the village ghetto, the death journey to Auschwitz, beatings, illness, starvation, escape, and then a harrowing flight from Russian troops. Saved occasionally through the unexpected kindness of others and always by her own courage, Hinda is vividly alive in this reweaving of her memories. A memorable story of resilience and enduring love."
─Betty Sue Flowers, PhD, Professor Emeritus UT-Austin; former director, Johnson Presidential Library, Editor, Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth

"As a student of the Holocaust and one who interviewed Holocaust survivors for Steven Spielberg's Survivors of the Shoah History Foundation, I thought I had heard it all. Now, I know I was wrong. This is not your ordinary Holocaust story. Do yourself a favor. Find out for yourself."
─Mike O'Krent, Founder and CEO, LifeStories Alive; Holocaust survivors interviewer for Steven Spielberg's Survivors of the Shoah History Foundation

If you were captivated by the New York Times #1 bestseller The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah, or, the Pulitzer Prize Winner All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, you will love Tatae's Promise.

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    • Kirkus

      Maysonave and Goldman's historical novel, based on a true story, offers an account of one woman's determination to survive the Holocaust. Although this is a work of fiction, its protagonist, Hinda Mondlak, was Goldman's mother, and the suffering she endures in these pages is based on actual events in her life. Just before her death in 1985, she recorded recollections of her experiences, which Goldman kept. He was traumatized by her account of the abuses she suffered at the Auschwitz concentration camp in the 1940s, but he came to believe that her story must be told to others. At the heart of his mother's narration was a promise made by her father, whom she called "Tatae," that she would survive to bring her family's tale to others: "You will live; you will tell," he'd insisted, just before his execution. In fulfilling this promise, Maysonave and Goldman rely heavily on Mondlak's testimony, but they employ the techniques of fiction to make her story more accessible to readers. The result is effective and often painful in its detail and emotional force. Many readers will admire Hinda's devotion to her family and her determination to resist her Nazi captors as they attempt to dehumanize her. Her story effectively reflects the larger pattern of the Holocaust, which included the expulsion of Jewish people from communities in occupied Poland, as well as their ghettoization and imprisonment in labor and death camps. This fictionalized account helps readers to see the impact of these events in intimate, devastating ways. As the story shifts to Auschwitz, the authors not only provide searing accounts of systematic abuses and executions but also offer horrific glimpses into the minds and actions of Nazi officers such as Josef Mengele. At other points, readers see how bonds of love between prisoners gave them the will to live and sustained their hopes for liberation and justice. There's also a remarkable love story at the heart of this novel--a relationship that will surprise and delight readers for its ability to withstand the most terrible of circumstances. A moving work about the horrors of the Holocaust.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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