by Tadeusz Borowski ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 30, 1967
The nightmare become daylight reality and pursued with a cold logic... Auschwitz, Birkenau. Tadeusz Borowski spent the years from 1943-45 in concentration camps; released at the end of the war, he could not come to terms with ""the world of stone,"" killed himself. But he had already written, if not the ""immortal epic"" he envisioned, a series of incisive, indelible stories that form a cumulative portrait of life in a concentration camp. The narrator Tadek is a non-Jew, a Polish student, a prison laborer who at times plays soccer while people walk on to the fake bathhouses, where the prison diversion is the procession of the doomed and the only charity, deceit as to their destination. Where Red Cross trucks transport gas for the daily round and the pall of the chamber hangs over each prisoner's head. Where on a night without soup even human brains are considered for edibility. ""There is no crime that man, will not commit in order to save himself,"" the author declares toward the close of these insights into the determination to survive. The anguished vision cost him his life; it remains a telling legacy.
Pub Date: Oct. 30, 1967
ISBN: 0140186247
Page Count: -
Publisher: Viking
Review Posted Online: N/A
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 1967
Categories: FICTION
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