I am the daughter of nobody. I have no sisters. I am nobody's granddaughter or daughter-in-law, aunt or cousin. Who am I? My past is all gone. It disappeared...
Ann Szedlecki was a Hollywood film-loving fourteen-year-old when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939 and she went to the Soviet Union with her older brother, hoping to return for the rest of her family later. Instead, she ends up spending most of the next six and a half years alone in the Soviet Union, enduring the harsh conditions of northern Siberia under Stalin’s Communist regime. Szedlecki’s beautifully written story, which lovingly re-constructs her pre-war childhood in Lodz, is also compelling for its candour about her experiences as a woman in the Soviet Union during World War II. As a very young woman without family, living largely by her wits, she is only too aware of her own vulnerability and meets every challenge she faces with a fierce determination to survive. Throughout her ordeals she hears the echo of her mother’s last words to her: “Be decent.”
Publishers
Search Books
by Author/Illustrator
by Audience by Genre by Special Interests by Series- The Rachel Trilogy
- Helen Keremos Mystery
- Jane Yeats Mystery
- Holocaust Remembrance Series for Young Readers
- A Nicki Haddon Mystery
- Notherland Journeys
- Kids' Power Series
- I'm A Great Little Kid Series
- First Nations Series for Young Readers
- Women's Hall of Fame Series
- Gutsy Girl
- Lunch Bunch
- La collection Azrieli des mémoires de survivants de l'Holocauste
