The diary keepers World War II in the Netherlands, as written by the people who lived through it
Book - 2023
"Based on select writings from a collection of more than two thousand Dutch diaries written during World War II in order to record this unparalleled time, and maintained by devoted archivists. The Diary Keepers illuminates a part of history we haven't seen in quite this way before, from the stories of a Nazi sympathizing police officer to a Jewish journalist who documented daily activities at a transport camp"--
- Subjects
- Genres
- Personal narratives
- Published
-
New York, NY :
Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers
[2023]
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Edition
- First edition
- Physical Description
- 12 unnumbered preliminary pages, 527 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 483-501) and index.
- ISBN
- 9780063070653
- Prologue: Searching for Emerich
- Introduction: "Vast quantities of this simple, everyday material"
- The Diarists (in alphabetical order)
- Part I. Occupation, May 1940-May 1941
- 1. "Paratroopers came down everywhere," 1940
- 2. "One should make the best of it"
- 3. "Anger blazed in young hearts," February 1941-March 1941
- 4. "No graves, no gravestones"
- 5. "Now the games can begin"
- Part II. Persecution and Deportation, April 1942-February 1944
- 6. "It's so hard to know what to do," April 1942-December 1942
- 7. "Like a good gardener"
- 8. "Was this forced labor or slaughter?"
- 9. "A kind of gathering place"
- 10. "Until at last the truck was full," July 1942-December 1942
- 11. "If only there were more places for these poor people"
- 12. "The time had come to go into hiding"
- 13. "The worst year for all Jewry," January 1943-June 1943
- 14. "The man who goes about with his notebook"
- 15. "Like Job on the dungheap," May 1943-August 1943
- 16. "She just had a very large heart"
- 17. "The tension is sometimes too much to bear," September 1943-December 1943
- 18. "The diary becomes a world"
- 19. "The last of the Mohicans," January 1944-August 1944
- 20. "A journalist in heart and soul"
- Part III. Toward Liberation, May 1944-May 1945
- 21. "I really shouldn't miss the view," May 1944-July 1944
- 22. "All the trivial things"
- 23. "The silence is almost murderous," September 1944-December 1944
- 24. "What do you have to know to know?"
- 25. "The Empire of the Krauts is over," November 1944-May 1945
- Part IV. The War In Memory, May 1945-May 2022
- 26. "An archaeology of silence"
- 27. "Suffering and struggle, loyalty and betrayal, humanity and barbarism, good and evil"
- 28. "A gradual lifting of the collective repression"
- Conclusion: "There were more"
- A Note on Translations
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Photo Credits
- Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review