

Ladataan... The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman (alkuperäinen julkaisuvuosi 1986; vuoden 1997 painos)– tekijä: Andrzej Szczypiorski
Teoksen tarkat tiedotAlku (tekijä: Andrzej Szczypiorski) (1986)
![]() Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. La bella signora Seidenman è solo uno dei personaggi che si muovono in questo ottimo romanzo ambientato nella Varsavia del 1943. E’ la tessera in un mosaico che si compone di tante diverse figure - il ferroviere e il sarto, il giudice e l’avvocato, il filologo classico, la vedova ebrea di un noto radiologo (la bella signora Seidenman), Il giovane cattolico idealista e il disincantato amico ebreo, il tedesco antinazista e la suora convintamente impegnata a salvare bambini ebrei (convertendoli per ‘salvare’ anche la loro anima), il collaborazionista e il bandito, la bambina ebrea apparentemente inconsapevole, destinata a diventare una donna di Israele profondamente segnata - in un tutto che mescola, e al tempo stesso divide, polacchi, tedeschi, russi, socialisti e nazisti, ebrei e cattolici, chi si arricchisce e chi muore di fame. E su tutto incombe la tragedia del ghetto. La storia di ognuno si incrocia con quella degli altri, in un intreccio tenuto saldamente in pungo dallo scrittore che descrive la tragedia presente, ma conosce anche il futuro tutt’altro che radioso. Mi sono chiesta perché tra tutti i personaggi sia proprio la signora Seidenman a dare il titolo al libro. Perché - credo - la sua storia non finisce con la rocambolesca vicenda della sua salvezza. La signora Seidenman è infatti destinata a essere vittima una seconda volta, espulsa in quanto ebrea nel ’68 dalla sua ‘amata’ Polonia. An excellent novel that looks at Poland (Warsaw) and the Polish during the German occupation of Poland during WWII. The story is based around the blond and blue-eyed Jewish widow Mrs Seidenman, now known as Mrs Gromowski (sp?), a Polish officer's widow. Someone informs on her, and her community comes through to save her. Though this is the framework for the novel, each chapter looks at a different person living in Warsaw at the time--from Mrs S-G (as she goes by after the war, living in Paris), to Pawel (a teen who plays a part in her rescue), to her academic next door neighbor Mr Korba (who sets the ball rolling, and has no idea that she actually is Jewish), to a street criminal. We also meet a long-time pro-Poland fighter in the Underground who has been fighting for an independent Poland since 1905, Pawel's best friend Henio (and his father and 4-yo sister, who is smuggled from the ghetto to a convent, where she is converted to Catholicism to save her), to Johann (Jçs) MÃ_ller (a German who has lived in Poland his entire life, and plays the key role in saving Mrs Seidenman). It can get a bit confusing with multiple nicknames and aliases, but you get a real feel for the community that existed under occupation. During WWI, Poland was occupied by the Russians, and you see the fear from those events effecting some of the characters' actions. You see the confusion over what the Germans are doing to their Jewish friends and neighbors, and anyone who crosses the paths of the wrong German occupier. This is a very sad but enjoyable novel set in Poland and Warsaw in 1943. The novel brings together Polish history and the Polish character and attitudes through the thoughts of various people, all of which have contact with Mrs Seidenman, a blue-eyed and blond-haired Jewish woman. Mrs Seidenman has changed her name and has false papers. Andrzej Szczypiorski manages to get an excellent balance between the dark sadness of those days and the humour as individuals engage with each other and carry on some sort of normal life. The author shows incredible compassion for everyone, Jews, Germans and Poles and makes a good attempt to get inside the head of the different characters in the novel. Szczypiorski was born in 1924 and took part in the 1944 uprising and so the novel feels authentic in the scenes it portrays. It is good to read a war novel from a Polish perspective and this was an excellent read. The Beautiful Mrs Seidnman Andrzej Szczypiorski 3 Stars Set in Nazi occupied Poland in 1943 the title character is a Jewish widow who happens to have blonde hair and blue eyes which help her when she is betrayed to the gestapo. This is the story of multiple people who know Mrs Seidenman or who have contact with her. We see what is happening from multiple points of view, the Jewish view, the Polish view and even the German view giving the reader an insight into the workings and thinkings of Poland as a country. This is not an easy book to read due to the shifting narration and the time spans each narrator covers, I would say you really need to read this with nothing distracting you and that once you have read it through go back to the beginning and start again with an idea of how the book is structured so you can follow the narrative and benefit from the insights you gained first time round. ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
In the Nazi-occupied Warsaw of 1943, Irma Seidenman, a young Jewish widow, possesses two attributes that can spell the difference between life and death: she has blue eyes and blond hair. With these, and a set of false papers, she has slipped out of the ghetto, passing as the wife of a Polish officer, until one day an informer spots her on the street and drags her off to the Gestapo. At times a dark lament, at others a sly and sardonic thriller, The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman is the story of the thirty-six hours that follow Irma's arrest and the events that lead to her dramatic rescue as the last of Warsaw's Jews are about to meet their deaths in the burning ghetto. No library descriptions found. |
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Ein lesenswertes Buch, das die Verläufe des 20. Jahrhunderts an einem begrenzten Figurentableau exemplarisch aufzeigt! (