Deliver to Ecuador
IFor best experience Get the App
Full description not available
E**S
Laugh cry and weep
The writing was excellent, and the pace was just right that I found myself unable to really stop reading. While being horrified at times by the subject matter, the fact that not only could Lale survive, he never lost his humanity. On the one hand, I would rather have never come across this book, but having done so and finished it, I am glad that I did. While ultimately love triumphs in the end, it is overshadowed by the horror of the Holocaust and the war.Thank you for writing such a necessary story, but more importantly, thank you, Lale, for showing us how to hold onto humanity in even the most trying of times.
E**B
Haunting
Such a brutal, riveting, poignant and incredible account of survival in the most inhumane conditions. The interactions with Mengele are so chilling.
J**S
We must never forget which is why The Tattooist of Auschwitz is must-read historical fiction
The book is a fictionalized, powerful account, set during a period of history that must never be forgotten. As the story opens, Lale Sokolov is a dapper twenty-five-year-old ladies' man who has been raised by his mother and sister to dote on and respect women. He enjoys female companion, but has not yet found the woman with whom he wants to spend his life. He is shocked at the manner in which he and the other men on the train are treated, realizing that his life will never be the same, a reality that is reinforced when a number -- 32407 -- is forcibly tattooed onto his arm. "He grasps his arm, staring at the number. How can someone do this to another human being? He wonders if for the rest of his life, be it short of long, he will be defined by this moment, this irregular number: 32407." Lale resolves to survive.Lale's horror is magnified when he is recruited to assist Pepan, the camp's Tätowierer. Pepan assures Lale that he can help him survive. "You want me to tattoo other men I don't think I could do that. Scar someone, hurt someone . . ." Papan convinces Lale by reminding him that if he doesn't take the job, "someone will who has less soul than you do, and he will hurt these people more." And so Lale swears to perform the job in the most compassionate way possible, given the circumstances.Morris relates the various ways in which Lale risked his life to help others, and did indeed survive confinement in place where hope was in short order most of the time. By some, he was branded a "collaborator" but he used his ingenuity and courage to take advantage of opportunities to save as many others as possible, including the beautiful young Gita with whom he instantly falls in love. She refuses to tell him about her past, her family, where she came from, or even her last name. For Gita it is too painful and she wants to forget because when she is with Lale she is able to escape reality for a few moments. She promises to tell him on the day they leave Auschwitz, but insists they "have no future." Lale refuses to give up, telling her about his vow to survive. "We will survive and make a life where we are free to kiss when we want to, make love when we want to."At its core, The Tattooist of Auschwitz is a love story, illustrating the power of love to provide comfort and distraction through dreams of and plans for the future, inspire selfless and risky action, and sustain and inspire during the darkest hours when it appears that hope is only for the naive or unenlightened.Remaining steadfastly committed to his vow is a challenge for Lale, of course. At times he feels nothing but despair, wondering how he is even "still breathing, when so many aren't?" Lale falls into an existence that is comfortable as compared to so many others because, as the Tätowierer, he works with a handful of other prisoners and is removed from the most inhumane conditions to which others are subjected. About that, he feels guilt, especially when he sees others die before his eyes or be brutally herded onto trucks with the knowledge that he will never see them again. Like Lale, Gita is painfully aware of the number of people who have passed through the camps because she works in the office processing paperwork.Lale did, in fact, find Gita after the liberation of the camps, and they married in October 1945. In the camp, Gita told Lale that someday he would honor all of those lost "by staying alive, surviving this place and telling the world what happened here." And he did. "I need to be with Gita," he said. But it was her death that inspired him to at last tell his story. "He wanted it to be recorded so, in his words, 'it would never happen again.'"The Tattooist of Auschwitz is difficult to read because of the subject matter, as well as the knowledge that it is largely based upon the actual experiences and observations of Lale, an ordinary man who, like so many others, was thrust into extraordinary and unimaginable circumstances. But therein also lies its strength. Morris relates Lale's story in a straight-forward, unrelenting manner, detailing how he was stripped of his very identity and assigned a number, along with his freedom, dignity, and possessions, and separated from his beloved family, most of whom he never saw again. Morris details, sans judgment, the things Lale did to survive, challenging readers to question what choices they might make.Morris did not visit Auschwitz until 2018. Once there, she stood on the concrete step that led down into Crematoria #3 and apologized, on behalf of Lale, to the 1.5 million people exterminated there. "He wrongly felt it was his fault that he couldn’t save the souls who died there," Morris relates. "Lale’s motto in Auschwitz was, 'If you wake up in the morning, it is a good day.' He believed you owed it to yourself and those around you to make the day the best it could be.”Through Morris, Lale has at last, and for all time, honored those who were lost "telling the world what happened" there.
C**.
Excellent book.
This story was very moving and at times more then I could bear to read. Such hardship these people went through makes me count my many blessings.
H**E
A Good Read
This is a good and interesting read about a man making the best of a very bad situation. The Jewish protagonist's job in Auschwitz is tattooing identification numbers on the arms of incoming prisoners. The Nazis consider it an important job. He is good at it and has a somewhat modest respect from his SS masters. The job comes with privileges including more food, a private room and more liberty to move around inside the walls than what is allowed for the many thousands of other workers in the camp. But I wonder about the story's accuracy. He seems to have it too good. He develops a testy friendship with his chief SS guard, occasionally he mouths off (which would get other prisoners executed on the spot), and he builds an underground network of connections by which he gathers money, jewelry and food from the part of the camp where prisoners' luggage is salvaged, and uses the proceeds to feed prisoners with whom he is friendly and bribe the matron of the barracks where his girl friend lives so they can carry on a sub rosa romance. Really now? Well, the story is allegedly based on a real person, so maybe it's true, or at least some of it. Whether fanciful or not, the book is an interesting tale about one man finding a way to survive and succeed in Hell, and even help a few others and find love for himself. The book has little to say about Auschwitz's infamous adjoining gas chamber driven death camp, Birkenau, so the reader is spared the full horror of Auschwitz. Some may see this as a shortcoming, but I don't believe so. The protagonist lived and worked in the gigantic Auschwitz work camp tattooing train loads of prisoners who were selected to live and work instead of being sent immediately to the gas chambers in Birkenau. He knew about Birkenau and what went on there, but it was not a part of his day to day life, labor and foremost concerns. The book is about those. It focuses on his rather privileged life and adventures in the work camp. In the book, as in his life, the smoking chimneys of the Birkenau crematoria are in the background.
C**Y
the Tattooist of Auschwitz
Very insightful read. Great character development. A glimpse into the horror of a concentration camp during WWII. Well written. The sadness and brutality made this story so interesting.
B**O
Very moving
Very moving story. It showed the prisoners not just as numbers in a holocaust statistic, but their lives, the pain, suffiering and the indomitable will to survive.
M**O
Muy envolvente
Buen estilo que atrapa.
I**T
Good
Good, but still reading
A**4
Received package damaged
I received the book damaged with ink/ used, while I payed for a brand new book. Not happy
D**E
Je n'ai pas encore vu
c'est un livre très intéressant
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 week ago