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The Mascot: Unraveling the Mystery of My Jewish Father's Nazi Boyhood Hardcover – November 1, 2007

4.5 out of 5 stars 193 ratings

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Documents the author's father's childhood as a Nazi SS unit's mascot, describing how the five-year-old Jewish escapee from a Nazi death squad witnessed massacres committed by his unit, his efforts to hide his Jewish faith and Nazi ties in subsequent years, and his later attempt to reclaim his identity. 25,000 first printing.
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Mark Kurzem studied at Melbourne, Tokyo, and Oxford universities. He served as international relations adviser to the mayor of Osaka in Japan. This is his first book.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Viking Adult
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 1, 2007
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 432 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0670018260
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0670018260
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.4 pounds
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 18 years and up
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.3 x 1.39 x 9.28 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 193 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
193 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book to be an amazing and gripping true story, with one review noting how it intertwines three narratives. The writing receives positive feedback, with customers describing it as extremely well-written.

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28 customers mention "Story quality"26 positive2 negative

Customers describe this book as an amazing and gripping true story, with one customer noting how it weaves together three interwoven narratives.

"...It's such an amazing story--a young boy escapes death in just the first of an unusual set of circumstances and developments, twists and turns,..." Read more

"...It may be the best recounting of a survivor's story that I have read." Read more

"For those of us who know alot about the halocaust this is an interesting perspective on one man's life during those years...." Read more

"...Most importantly, it provides an insight to others, especially those born after WW II into the horrors of that period and how ordinary people were..." Read more

5 customers mention "Writing quality"5 positive0 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, with one noting its engaging style.

"...What makes this book such fascinating reading is it's style...." Read more

"Well-written memoir of a son's remarkable journey to discover the illusive facts of his father's boyhood with Nazis soldiers...." Read more

"...The story is fascinating, and the writing is amazing. I recommend this book to anyone who enjoys reading about war torn life." Read more

"Very well written and fascinating story. I couldn't wait to hear out it all turned out. Highly recommend." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2008
    After reading a highly favorable review in the New York Times, I rushed down to the bookstore where a friend works to see if they had this book, and was shocked to find that they did not have it and that no one had been asking about it.

    It's such an amazing story--a young boy escapes death in just the first of an unusual set of circumstances and developments, twists and turns, leading to events that cripple him later as a husband and father until he feels compelled to reveal his story to his son, the author of this book.

    I have read a number of "survival" books about the Holocaust. Surely this is the most unusual. It reminded me in some ways of Martin Gilbert's THE BOYS, but this is a completely different story. This is a Jewish boy who was adopted by Latvian troops collaborating with the Nazis, and as an adult, he has clearly suffered from guilt and confusion such that the reader experiences the journey as well. As I read on, I found myself wondering if the truth would turn out to be different from what the boy's memories were, just as the author clearly did as he listened to his father's story, a tale slowly revealed over the course of a few years in the late '90s, almost fifty years after the original events in Russia and Latvia in 1941-45.

    And there are several levels on which this story works. In the WWII period, you get a feeling for village, or shtetl, life in Russia through the initial memories of the boy as well as later when he and his son do further investigations. You get what seems to be a likely accurate picture of the soldiers, higher officials, and collaborating civilians the boy came to know. There are vivid depictions of the later war years.

    Later on, after the author begins to find out the fuller story, father and son confront mixed reactions from scholars and Jewish organizations as well as the Latvian community in Australia, where the author grew up not knowing he was Jewish until his father felt compelled to find out who he really was and where he came from.

    I really liked the way the book was organized, mostly short chapters, and here, the author or his editors really did well in observing that sometimes "less is more". Thus, there is not an extensive discussion of some minor characters, colleagues, friends, and others whom the author consults and confronts as the story of his father unfolds, yet we understand pretty well where these characters are coming from.

    Finally, I commend the book for its helpful index, maps, and of course the fascinating photos that are reproduced showing the young "Alex" in his SS uniform. It's a little puzzling that the modern photos are rendered in the same grainy way as the old ones, but that is a minor complaint.
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2013
    Wow, just wow. I don't know how to describe this book. It is in some ways like a detective story or putting together a jig saw puzzle. You read it and you wonder how the pieces will fit together. I've been in two death camps -- Auschwitz (five times) and Majdanek (twice). The first time I travelled to Auschwitz in 1991 I went with a Polish Army Colonel whose uncle was killed there. I've read several books about the 'Shoah including "Night" and "The Diary of Anne Frank." I've pored over David Roskies' "Against the Apocalypse" and read a little history like the "Last of the Just." I stood with my wife and son during the 50th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in Warsaw where that ghetto stood. I once did a seminar at the Jewish Theological Seminary on the Holocaust. So, I came to this book with some background.

    I remember what Dr. Alan Mintz told me about dealing with it. He said you can't comprehend it, you can only talk to God about it. Yeah, this brings all that back. Some might suggest that the events recounted in this book are too improbable to be true. I totally disagree. The events recounted are all too real. Especially the witness recounting about how the Einsatzgruppen carried out the killing in Koidanov. If for no other reason than the recounting of the Koidanov massacre on pp. 323-4 you ought to read this book. Warning, this book does not resolve anything, it only recounts one (then) young Jewish boy's story -- what happened to him and how he survived it. But, the book is so much more than that.

    This book also makes us think about who we are, where we come from and who we come from. It may be the best recounting of a survivor's story that I have read.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2009
    For those of us who know alot about the halocaust this is an interesting perspective on one man's life during those years. For those in our society that still don't know much about these times it may not explain things well enough, for example it just implies some of the horrific experiences this boy sees and is forced to participate in. But it is an excellent example of what people in those times did to survive, just to live through it.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2008
    "The Mascot"makes for rivetting reading. It really tells three stories which are inticately intertwined:The story of a child survivor under horrendous circumstances, the story of the survivor's struggle as an ageing father of adult children to come to terms with his past and how that impacts on his family relations and the story of retracing the past and finding remenants of that troubled childhood.
    What makes this book such fascinating reading is it's style. The author is the son of that child survivor who had never told his story, but for some reason now feels compelled to tell one of his sons, Mark.
    Mark writes this story almost without analysis or comment. He simply lets us readers sit at the kitchen table late at night and listen to the intimate and difficult conversations with his father. He let's us be there when his father struggles with himself to tell his story and he takes us with them on a journey to the locations of the child's survival.
    As a child survior of the Holocaust myself (although my storyis comletely different) I can so well identify with the internal struggles, the nightmares,the emotional turbulence...
    This book makes such an important contribution to the need for survivors to know that they are neither alone nor unique. Most importantly, it provides an insight to others, especially those born after WW II into the horrors of that period and how ordinary people were forced to find extraordinary strength and means to survive.
    8 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • MRS V F OTTO
    3.0 out of 5 stars Unravelling the mystery of My Jewish background
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 22, 2016
    Interesting and unusual. Prompt delivery and very good value
  • supermoviefan
    5.0 out of 5 stars Decide for yourself if this story is true
    Reviewed in Canada on August 31, 2014
    Fascinating, at times incredible, but always compelling and riveting. Read the book, then go to the internet and google the author and read the articles explaining the controversy over whether this shocking story of a child Holocaust survivor is true. The photos confirm that this child existed, and that he was a nazi mascot, but was he Jewish? Blond and blue-eyed from Belarus? Could he have survived in the forest as long as he said he did? Who cares? Maybe it wasn't as long as he felt it was as a child. That's not really the point. Could he have hidden his circumcision from the nazi soldiers? I think that's possible. So, for whatever it's worth, I believe that the story told in this book is true. This is without question the most interesting and unusual Holocaust survivor memoir in existence. Yes, the book is overly long and could have been easily edited down to 200 pages, but it's an easy and enjoyable read. Truth is so much more interesting than fiction! I am so sad that this gifted author died so young. He certainly did his father proud.
  • Revd Canon Richard Weber
    5.0 out of 5 stars My thanks to a good and brave son and author Mark Kurzem
    Reviewed in Canada on July 14, 2014
    Some years ago I had watched a Radio Bible Class RBC documentary on the slaughter of whole Jewish communities in Belarus and the fact they had been buried and many of them still alive.
    At time I was shocked by it ,Mark Kurzem brought it down to a very personal level ,his father witnessed it as a child.
    Every person should read this book and commit themselves to to protect and speak up for the vunerable in our world..
    Dietict Bonhoffer said silence in the face of evil is evil and God will not hold us guiltless,not to speak in to speak,not to act is to act..

    My thanks to a good and brave son and author Mark Kurzem.
  • Blake
    5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely amazing book! A must read if you love WWII ...
    Reviewed in Canada on August 22, 2017
    Absolutely amazing book! A must read if you love WWII literature and true accounts of the war. I would recommend reading this book!
  • Laura O'Reilly
    5.0 out of 5 stars great book
    Reviewed in Canada on August 4, 2016
    great book - well written - hard to read sometimes because of the material - jumping back and forth from dreams/memories to present