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摘要
摘要
When German soldiers arrive in Zloczow during World War II, a young Jewish girl must decide whether or not to conceal her identity and work for a Nazi in Germany in order to survive.
评论 (2)
《儿童读物杂志》(Horn Book)书评
Marisa, a blond, blue-eyed Jewish girl in WWII Poland passes as a Polish peasant and gets a job working for a Nazi family. She experiences a predictable romance with a rebellious cousin and eventually obtains work in Germany. The following chapters contain incidents that don't contribute to the novel's development, and the ending is dissatisfying, but the premise is original enough to generate interest. From HORN BOOK Fall 1999, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
《书目》(Booklist)书评
Gr. 7-10. "I survived. Protected by the Nazis that killed my family. Could I ever forgive myself?" With her blond hair and blue eyes, Marisa, 15, looks like the Aryan ideal, and when the Nazis invade Poland and round up and massacre her Jewish family and friends, she passes as Polish and moves to Germany, where she works first for a brutish farmer and then for a cultured Nazi family. Matas' fine docu-novels, from Daniel's Story (1993) to After the War (1996), all draw on survivors' testimony to tell of the Holocaust experience through the eyes of young people. This story holds you not only with the authentic account of the Jewish girl in hiding in disguise right in the jaws of the enemy but also with the intimate view of the Nazi home. How could these people be so kind and yet murder and condone murder and torture with no problem? She watches the children play the board game Jews Out, and she helps them with their lessons that teach them that Jews are not even of the human race. The brutal details of the genocide are always there (the children have photos of German soldiers with their guns aimed at naked men, women, and children), and Marisa sees how you can become numb to the suffering of those who are dehumanized. Always she struggles with the overriding moral question: How could God allow such evil? (Reviewed February 1, 1999)0689813546Hazel Rochman