From Publishers Weekly
From a unique concentration camp established by the Nazis in 1942 in Czechoslovakia at Terezin as a "model ghetto" are heard the voices of women inmates in this collection of their poetry and memoirs. During the three-and-one-half years of the camp's existence, the ugly reality of life inside was at sharp variance with its public image as a resettlement oasis for European Jews. The day-to-day life described here was a coexistence of brutality and culture, with starving Jews creating music and art. In gathering the memoirs of inmates who wrote during their internment or after their release, Schwertfeger, who teaches at the University of Wisconsin, provides another dimension to the art of survival. From these fragments emerge insistent voices.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
This is an anthology of poems and memoirs of Theresienstadt inmates, with a history of the camp preceding the collection. Editor Schwertfeger (German, Univ. of Wisconsin) takes that history largely from Zdenek Lederer's Ghetto Theresienstadt ( 1953; Fertig, 1983. reprint) and H.G. Adler's Theresienstadt 1941-1945 ( Tubingen: Mohr, 1960. 2d ed.); the bulk of the primary material is from mostly unknown or unpublished sources. The focus is on women's writings. The most interesting contribution to Theresienstadt literature here is in the Epilogue, where Schwertfeger reports on her visit to Terezin, as it is now called, in the summer of 1987. She finds no meaningful memorial there. Let, therefore, this book be a memorial, at least to the women who suffered there.
- Gerda Haas, Holocaust Human Rights Ctr. of Maine, LewistonCopyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.