The secret Holocaust diaries The untold story of Nonna Bannister

Nonna Bannister, 1927-2004

Book - 2009

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BIOGRAPHY/Bannister, Nonna
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2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Bannister, Nonna Due Dec 22, 2024
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Prologue
  • Train to Agony
  • Chapter 1. Boarding the Train
  • Chapter 2. Baby Sarah
  • Life Before the War
  • Chapter 3. Family Background
  • Chapter 4. Mama's Family
  • Chapter 5. Educating Anna
  • Chapter 6. Move to Taganrog
  • Chapter 7. Move to Rostov-on-Don
  • Chapter 8. A Day in the Park
  • Chapter 9. The Depression in Russia: Stalin's Power
  • Chapter 10. Winter Vacation with Babushka at the Dacha
  • Chapter 11. Our Journey by Train
  • Chapter 12. Homecoming Welcome
  • Chapter 13. Our Fun Time Begins
  • Chapter 14. Christmas Church Service
  • Chapter 15. Christmas Day: 1932
  • Chapter 16. Reflections on Childhood
  • Chapter 17. Back to Reality: 1933
  • Chapter 18. Troubled Times: 1933-34
  • Chapter 19. Changing Times: 1934-35
  • Chapter 20. Wine-Tasting Time
  • Chapter 21. Times of Uncertainty: 1937
  • Chapter 22. Remembrances
  • Chapter 23. Germany Attacks Russia
  • Chapter 24. Preparations for the Invasion
  • Chapter 25. Our World Begins to Crumble
  • Chapter 26. Papa Is Found in Hiding
  • Chapter 27. My Last Minutes with Papa
  • Chapter 28. Papa's Burial
  • Chapter 29. Life without Papa
  • Chapter 30. Surviving the German Occupation of Konstantinowka
  • The Agony Continues
  • Chapter 31. August 1942
  • Chapter 32. The End of the Line
  • Chapter 33. Identification Patches
  • Chapter 34. Labor Camp, Our First Assignment: 1942
  • Chapter 35. The Break: Spring 1943
  • Chapter 36. Loss of Mama: September 1943
  • Chapter 37. Survival to the End
  • Chapter 38. Last Message from Mama
  • Chapter 39. Searching for Mama: Merxhausen Hospital
  • New Life
  • Chapter 40. The Final Arrangements
  • "October 1989: Americans"
  • Afterword
  • Appendix A. Life with Nonna
  • Appendix B. "Is This It? Is This All?"
  • Appendix C. Documents
  • Appendix D. Genealogy
  • Chronology
  • Glossary of Names and Places
  • About the Author
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Editors
Review by Booklist Review

How this story came to be written is a big part of the drama. The only World War II survivor of her wealthy Russian, devout Christian family, Nonna Lisowskaya came to the U.S. in 1950, married Henry Bannister, and never spoke about her Holocaust ­experience--until a few years before her death in 2004, when she revealed her diaries, originally written in six languages on paper scraps that she had kept in a pillow strapped to her body throughout the war. Now those diaries, in her English translation, tell her story of fleeing Stalinist Russia, not knowing what was waiting in Hitler's Germany, where she saw her mother murdered in the camps, escaped a massacre of Jews shot into a pit, was nursed by Catholic nuns, and much more. The editors' commentary in different type constantly interrupts the memoir, but the notes are helpful in explaining history and context. The added-on heavy messages celebrating Nonna's Christian forgiveness seem intrusive and unnecessary, no matter how heartfelt.--Rochman, Hazel Copyright 2009 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Russian refugee Bannister (1927-2004) rarely spoke about her brutal experiences under the regimes of Stalin and Hitler, not even to the American she married after the war. In this memoir, she reveals how a privileged childhood in the 1920s and '30s gave way to horror and loss in the 1940s. Although the sound quality of this production is poor (lots of rustling papers), Rebecca Gallagher does reasonably well with the multiple languages and wisely avoids attempting to replicate European accents. What is irritating, however, is the constant interruption in the form of unnecessary editor's notes, which make the narrative choppy and disjointed. More helpful is the seventh disc, which contains an interview with Bannister's husband and son, a precious audio reminiscence from Nonna herself, recorded in 1993, and abundant PDF materials, including maps, photographs and genealogical data. A Tyndale hardcover. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Bannister, the proud daughter of Russian nobility, endured German forced labor camps, the loss of family and friends, and other experiences more commonly associated with the persecution of Jews and other minorities during World War II. Here, more than half a century later, she shares her story through self-translated diary entries and accounts of her family history. The diary text is greatly enhanced by the numerous editorial comments, which provide context, supplemental information, and some chronological orientation. Rebecca Gallagher (Why I Jumped) adeptly transitions between the diary and editorial text. Though this is a fascinating work, Bannister's Christian proselytizing can be annoying. Recommended for any adult interested in Holocaust materials; too graphic for kids. [Audio clip available through www.oasisaudio.com.-Ed.]-I. Pour-El, Ames Jewish Congregation, IA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.