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Susan Dworkin

    Susan Dworkin es una autora que escribe para todos, abordando diversos géneros con narrativas cautivadoras. Su obra incluye dramas históricos, como la coautoría del bestseller The Nazi Officer's Wife, que profundiza en temas de amor, terror y coraje en la Alemania de Hitler. También explora la ciencia ficción, como se ve en su novela The Commons, ambientada en un futuro donde la humanidad lucha contra la inanición. La aguda perspectiva de Dworkin sobre la realización cinematográfica es evidente en Making Tootsie, una mirada íntima a la creación de una comedia clásica.

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    The Nazi Officer's Wife
    • The Nazi Officer's Wife

      How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust

      • 305 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Edith Hahn, a law student in Vienna, faced the horrors of the Nazi regime when the Gestapo forced her and her mother into a ghetto, marking their papers with a "J." After being taken to a labor camp, she managed to convince officials to spare her mother, but upon returning home, she found her mother had been deported. Realizing she was now a hunted woman, Edith removed her yellow star and went underground, struggling for food and safety each night. Her boyfriend, Pepi, was too frightened to assist her, but a Christian friend provided identity papers, allowing her to escape to Munich. There, she met Werner Vetter, a Nazi party member who fell in love with her. Despite her protests and eventual confession of her Jewish identity, he married her and kept her secret. Edith recounts her life filled with fear, detailing encounters with German officials questioning her lineage, her refusal of painkillers during childbirth to protect her secret, and the harrowing experience of hiding with her daughter while Russian soldiers ravaged the streets. Throughout her ordeal, Edith meticulously preserved her survival records, including real and falsified papers, letters from Pepi, and photographs from labor camps. These documents, now exhibited at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., weave a complex and ultimately triumphant narrative of resilience.

      The Nazi Officer's Wife2000
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