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When grownups play at war : a child's memoir…
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When grownups play at war : a child's memoir (edizione 2005)

di Ilona Flutsztejn-Gruda, Sarah Cummins

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When Grownups Play at War is the unique, compelling memoir of a young Polish Jewish girl during the Second World War. In an authentic voice based on first-hand experience, Gruda gives us a rare perspective on the life of a family fleeing from Poland to Uzebekistan. Her account lays bare the trials of coming of age amidst the constant upheavals of her wartime years. Gruda conveys a sense of immediacy and humanity to her description of the daily realities of the wartime experiences of so many Jewish refugees on the eastern front. We travel beside her in train and cart, in bitter cold and dusty heat across war-torn Eastern Europe. With vivid, haunting strokes, she paints portraits of the people and cultures she comes to know along the way. Gruda writes through the eyes of a child with rare irony and painful honesty, allowing us an occasional glimpse of a sly sense of humour and revealing the wisdom of the adult she later became.… (altro)
Utente:matt.smidt
Titolo:When grownups play at war : a child's memoir
Autori:Ilona Flutsztejn-Gruda
Altri autori:Sarah Cummins
Info:Toronto : Sumach Press, c2005.
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When Grownups Play At War: A Child's Memoir di Ilona Flutsztejn-Gruda

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    A Red Boyhood: Growing Up Under Stalin di Anatole Konstantin (meggyweg)
    meggyweg: Both authors were Soviets who fled the Nazi advance and wound up in Central Asia.
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With deceptively simple, straight-forward prose, Ilona Flutsztejn-Gruda recounts her experiences coming of age during World War II. The daughter of secular Polish Jews, Ilona and her family fled east at the onset of the conflict, eventually finding themselves in Uzbekistan, where they settled for the duration of the war.

This book reminded me in many ways of Esther Hautzig's memoir of her family's wartime deportation to Siberia, The Endless Steppe, which I read as an adolescent. Like Hautzig, Ilona and her family struggle to find food and shelter in strange places, enduring hunger and cold, confronting prejudice, but also encountering help and community. Although the suffering recounted is real, and very acute, the reader is always aware that by removing themselves (or being removed, as the case may be) from areas of Nazi dominance, a far more terrible fate has been averted.

Perhaps it is unjust, but this creates a sense, almost of relief, in the reader, that this particular family didn't find itself passing through the gates of Auschwitz, or some similar place of horrors. However that may be, this was a fascinating story in its own right, and sadly, in a world with so many refugees, it could not be more topical. ( )
1 vota AbigailAdams26 | Jun 20, 2013 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Ilona Flutsztejn-Grudaautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Cummins, SarahTraduttoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
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When Grownups Play at War is the unique, compelling memoir of a young Polish Jewish girl during the Second World War. In an authentic voice based on first-hand experience, Gruda gives us a rare perspective on the life of a family fleeing from Poland to Uzebekistan. Her account lays bare the trials of coming of age amidst the constant upheavals of her wartime years. Gruda conveys a sense of immediacy and humanity to her description of the daily realities of the wartime experiences of so many Jewish refugees on the eastern front. We travel beside her in train and cart, in bitter cold and dusty heat across war-torn Eastern Europe. With vivid, haunting strokes, she paints portraits of the people and cultures she comes to know along the way. Gruda writes through the eyes of a child with rare irony and painful honesty, allowing us an occasional glimpse of a sly sense of humour and revealing the wisdom of the adult she later became.

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