Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: The Nazi Officer's Wife

Full title: The Nazi Officer's Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust
Author: Edith Hahn Beer
Year: 1999
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 8.1
Genres/categories: Award winners, Non Fiction, History, Memoirs, War/Military, Historical fiction

Purchase/research links:
Winner of the Audie Award for Biography/Memoir in 2004.

Edith Hahn was an outspoken young woman studying law in Vienna when the Gestapo forced Edith and her mother into a ghetto, issuing them papers branded with a "J." Soon, Edith was taken away to a labor camp, and though she convinced Nazi officials to spare her mother, when she returned home, her mother had been deported. Knowing she would become a hunted woman, Edith tore the yellow star from her clothing and went underground, scavenging for food and searching each night for a safe place to sleep. Her boyfriend, Pepi, proved too terrified to help her, but a Christian friend was not: With the woman's identity papers in hand, Edith fled to Munich. There she met Werner Vetter, a Nazi party member who fell in love with her. And despite her protests and even her eventual confession that she was Jewish, he married her and kept her identity secret.
In vivid, wrenching detail, Edith recalls a life of constant, almost paralyzing fear. She tells of German officials who casually questioned the lineage of her parents; of how, when giving birth to her daughter, she refused all painkillers, afraid that in an altered state of mind she might reveal her past; and of how, after her husband was captured by the Russians and sent to Siberia, Edith was bombed out of her house and had to hide in a closet with her daughter while drunken Russians soldiers raped women on the street.
Yet despite the risk it posed to her life, Edith Hahn created a remarkable collective record of survival: She saved every set of real and falsified papers, letters she received from her lost love, Pepi, and photographs she managed to take inside labor camps.
On exhibit at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., these hundreds of documents form the fabric of an epic story - complex, troubling, and ultimately triumphant.
Similar books:

Crossing the Borders of Time
by Leslie Maitland

Leap into Darkness
by Leo Bretholz

Jack and Rochelle
by Jack Sutin

Searching for Schindler
by Thomas Keneally

I Will Bear Witness
by Victor Klemperer

The Seamstress
by Sara Tuvel Bernstein

In My Hands
by Irene Gut Opdyke

The Pianist
by Wladyslaw Szpilman

Alicia
by Alicia Appleman-Jurman

Clara's War
by Clara Kramer

The Big Lie
by Isabella Leitner

Kindertransport
by Olga Levy Drucker

50 Children
by Steven Pressman

Sala's Gift
by Ann Kirschner

Some Girls, Some Hats and Hitler
by Trudi Kanter

Surviving Hitler
by Andrea Warren

When Broken Glass Floats
by Chanrithy Him

The Civil War
by Geoffrey C. Ward

In Pharaoh's Army
by Tobias Wolff

The Lost
by Daniel Mendelsohn