By the time he was six years old, Stephen had been bombarded by the
Luftwaffe and deported from occupied Guernsey, along with his family,
to a prison camp in the heart of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich. He had
seen men die in front of him and walked with Jewish prisoners straight
off the cattle-trucks from Bergen- Belsen. He had nearly drowned,
narrowly avoided being savaged by Alsatian guard dogs, been beaten by
a pathological member of the SS and had his hand broken by a guard
whilst attempting to feed a Russian prisoner. The family kept going
through three and a half years of imprisonment, reinforced by their
strong sense of survival and their loving support for each other,
before a dramatic and violent liberation by Allied forces ended their
ordeal. Yet when they were eventually returned to Guernsey, it was to
find that their tranquil home had been stricken and scarred by Nazi
occupation. Told through Steven Matthews’ own memories, as well as
writing from his mother’s diaries and previously unpublished
photographs, The Day the Nazis Came is an utterly unique memoir.
Depicting the world of Nazi prison camps through the eyes of a child
– a world in which the real dangers often seemed trivial and every
day was a new adventure – it tells not just of the prisoners’
plight, but provides an important and poignant reminder that not every
German soldier was cruel and hateful. Above all, it pays tribute to
the preciousness of childhood, and shows that human kindness may
flower in the unlikeliest of places.
Les mer
My childhood journey from Britain to a German concentration camp
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781786063366
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Bonnier Publishing Fiction Ltd
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter