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Escaping into the Night [Hardcover]

D. Dina Friedman (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Halina Rudowski is on the run. When the Polish ghetto where she lives is evacuated, she narrowly escapes, but her mother is not as lucky. Along with her friend Batya, Halina makes her way to a secret encampment in the woods where Jews survive by living underground. As the group struggles for food, handles infighting, and attempts to protect themselves from the advancing Germans, Halina must face the reality of life without her mother.

Based on historical events, this gripping tale sheds light on a little-known aspect of the Holocaust: the underground forest encampments that saved several thousand Jews from the Nazis. In telling the story of one girl's survival, Escaping into the Night marks the arrival of a remarkable new voice in fiction.


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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 6-8–Loosely based on actual events, this dramatic story of escape from the Warsaw Ghetto offers insight into the will to survive. After her mother is killed by the Nazis and the ghetto is evacuated, Halina Rudowski escapes through an underground tunnel to the forest with the help of her mothers boyfriend. Though she has resented Georg in the past, she eventually realizes that he cares for her as a father would. She hides with a group of Jews living in underground bunkers. Strengthened by the knowledge that her mother would have wanted her to survive, the 13-year-old turns from her despair and perseveres despite unbearable obstacles. Halina is embarrassed into bravery by the courage of her friend Batya as the two girls join a group trying to find food for the encampment. Later she risks her life to save Batya. She develops a crush on a boy who is working for the resistance. In Halina, Friedman has created a reluctant heroine who is also a believable adolescent. Readers will be pulled into this story that combines adventure, mystery, and the resilience of human nature, also found in Uri Orlevs Run, Boy, Run (Houghton, 2003).–Renee Steinberg, formerly at Fieldstone Middle School, Montvale, NJ
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Gr. 7-10. When the Nazis take her mother in the Jewish roundup in the Polish Norwogrodek ghetto, Halina, 13, escapes to the forest, where she struggles to survive with 300 other Jews who are being led by local partisans. Based on historical events, this eloquent first novel captures her exciting escape and survival adventure, while never denying the horror: Halina's friend, Batya, who also escapes the roundup, sees Halina's mother on the edge of a pit just before she's shot. Although Batya is religious, Halina and Reuven, a refugee who loses his three brothers, have never thought much about God or being Jewish. Yet the three young people come together, and though they suffer grim abuse from German soldiers, they are able to save each other. Friedman never idealizes the refugees or their rescuers, who fight among themselves in the struggle to survive as her first-person account brings teens close to a part of Holocaust history seldom told. Pair this with other Polish Holocaust escape stories, such as Anita Lobel's No Pretty Pictures (1998) and Uri Orlev's Man from the Other Side (1995). Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers (January 24, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1416902589
  • ISBN-13: 978-1416902584
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 6.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,638,646 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I grew up in New York City, a place I hold close to my heart and love to write about. When I was 23 I moved with my husband to western Massachusetts because it was "a compromise between Brooklyn and the Ozarks." We currently live in a 350 year old house next door to a dairy farm with our two children, dog, and cat. I love to walk in the woods near my house, and a big impetus in writing ESCAPING INTO THE NIGHT was imagining how the woods could be home. And like Gus and Liza in PLAYING DAD'S SONG, a typical family scene at our house might be any two of us discussing what type of hot sauce to use with the sounds of oboe, violin or piano in the background.

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The night has a thousand eyes, October 5, 2006
This review is from: Escaping into the Night (Hardcover)
Writing a review of a children's Holocaust book is surprisingly difficult. For one thing, you're dealing with a genre that's inherently dark. If you're the author of a Holocaust title, how do you balance an evil time period with enough hope to keep child readers interested, while still staying true to the events in all their horror? You do the best you can and then some dim bulb reviewer comes along and projects their own interpretation of past events they have no firsthand knowledge of onto your work. So as a reviewer of children's books I have to gauge whether or not a given title concerning the Jewish people during WWII is respectful enough, honest enough, and kid-friendly enough to recommend. This is probably why I don't read that many Holocaust books in general. Now earlier this year I found myself utterly charmed by Jennifer Roy's remarkable, "Yellow Star", and the pump (as it were) was primed. Good thing too. "Escaping Into the Night" is a gritty, no holds barred account of the Jewish encampments of western Belorussia and the guerrilla fighting that went on there. It's also a coming of age tale involving a girl, her transformation from child to woman, and how she comes to redefine what "family" means.

Halina Rudowski's mother always said she worried too much. Even though mother and child were sent to live in a Polish ghetto at the start of WWII, Mrs. Rudowski refuses to give up the niceties of life. Then she's unceremoniously gunned down after work one day, leaving her only child alone in a dangerous world. Aided by people within the ghetto, Halina, her friend Batya, and a boy named Reuven escape to the Bielski encampment hidden deep in the Belorussia forests. Life in the camps is never easy and Halina soon finds that it can be just as dangerous to be "safe" as it is to live a life in a Nazi run ghetto. Soon she and Batya are volunteering for difficult missions and are risking their lives for the good of the whole. Through a variety of trials and tribulations, Halina learns to care for those nearest to her, and is able to accept that all a person can ever be is brave as they have to be, "and not a bit more."

Character and plot move at a satisfying clip in this smart little novel. Though we meet a great many people, Friedman is able to adeptly keep all their names clear and concise enough that you are able to remember who they are from page to page. More importantly, they ring true. Not every Jewish person is a saint in this book and they don't suffer in saintly silence when they are hurt. These are real people with real concerns, and just because some madman wants to exterminate them, that doesn't suddenly make them two-dimensional good guys. There is depth to each person in this book. As for the plot, it knows when to speed up and when to slow down. A reader will find the book exciting, but not so breathtaking that it takes away from any of the action. And though a bibliography would have been especially nice for this too little known aspect of WWII, there is at least some further information about Bielski and his encampments in the Afterword.

Friedman's story also did a couple things I'd not seen before in a book for kids. First of all, Halina is not a slim delicate little flower. She's a well-muscled girl who takes after her father's Polish peasant side of the family. Though her mother desired "civilization" and the hum of urban life, in the camps Halina discovers the joys of living in the wild. Such a joy would be frowned upon by those sophisticates that regard a love of nature with poor farm folk, but the love Halina grows for this newfound life offers the book the much needed depth it needs to become more than just another Holocaust story.

Is the book too dark for child readers, though? Well, it has its moments. Halina's friend Batya is strangled before her eyes and tortured when Halina escapes without her (though you do not SEE the torture firsthand). The girls are forced to eat bacon though it goes against their beliefs. Beloved characters die, kill, and go through a variety of wrenching moments. What you have to keep in mind, though, is that at least Ms. Friedman is being honest about how awful it was to live under the constant threat of annihilation at the hands of the Nazis. It would be far far worse if Ms. Friedman chose to cushion these horrors in a falsely cheery light. There is honesty and there is sadism, and I think the author does a good job of leaning more one way than another. This is not to say, however, that all kids will be entirely ready to read a book of this nature. "Yellow Star" and "Number the Stars" have their place as Holocaust fiction for younger kids. "Escaping Into the Night", in contrast, is definitely for the older set.

Usually when a book takes place during a harrowing moment in history it will close with that moment in question ending. You read a Holocaust novel and you naturally assume that at the end of the book the war in Europe will be over and the healing will begin. To Ms. Friedman's credit she decided not to go the easy route with this puppy. So as not to spoil it for you I won't say how the story ends, per say. Just that somehow or other Ms. Friedman is able to create a hopeful ending in the midst of a still horrible situation. All in all, "Escaping Into the Night" is a good and well-written book, but not a pleasurable read. It feels good for you, but for those kids who, like myself, are not big historical fiction buffs, one read is all it takes. A remarkable title certainly worth remembering, but not for the chuckleheads amongst us.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A 2007 Association of Jewish Libraries Notable Book for Older Readers, January 28, 2007
This review is from: Escaping into the Night (Hardcover)
Halina Rudowski lives in the ghetto with her mother. They share their cramped quarters with a religious family. When her mother and others do not come back from work, Halina is forced to deal with her absence and escape from the ghetto to save her own life. Her mother's boyfriend helps Halina and several other ghetto residents escape through tunnels from the ghetto through to sewer pipes that lead to the countryside. They hide during the day and walk during the night, eventually meeting up with a large partisan group that lives in the woods. Halina and her friends grow closer as they face danger and the elements. When they need to escape from the advancing German army, Halina summons all her strength, carries her injured friend, and eventually joins the rests of the partisans with the Russian army.

Ms. Friedman based this work of historical fiction on accounts of the Bielski partisans, who hid in the forests of Belorussia during World War II. The book captures many aspects of the Holocaust quite well: the separation of family and their not knowing what happened to each other; the questioning of faith in God after enduring tragedy and atrocities; and living under the constant threat of danger. Halina is a young girl who must grow up quickly, and her longing for her mother, her cat, and to be able to sing out loudly add dimension to this likable character. Batya is a religious girl, and when she is forced to eat bacon in order to survive, the reader gets an example of the cruelty of the Nazis and the lengths to which they went to make the Jews suffer. While there are graphic description of shootings and violence, the focus of the story is Halina's and her friends' survival. The action proceeds at a quick pace, and the descriptions of the hideouts and the forests give a convincing sense of place. This novel illustrates yet another dimension of survival during the Holocaust, and it is appropriate for all libraries. REVIEWED BY KATHE PINCHUCK (BLOOMFIELD PUBLIC LIBRARY - BLOOMFIELD, NJ)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful story, April 25, 2006
By 
B. Kiernan (Shrewsbury, MA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Escaping into the Night (Hardcover)
Escaping into the Night is an eloquent tale of a young girl living during the Holocaust who flees from the Nazi-controlled Ghettos and takes refuge in the woods with other Jews. The main character, Halina, is someone to both cheer for and admire. A heartfelt and thoughtful, as well as thought-provoking, story.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I could smell Mama's perfume when she woke me up, Georg must have gotten it for her on the black market. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Tante Rosa, The Russian Waltz, Frau Schneider, Queen of the Night, The Magic Flute, Georg Goldmann, Jewish Police
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