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Two Roads Home

Hitler, Stalin, and the Miraculous Survival of My Family

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Wait time: About 2 weeks
"Hair-raising... includes not just Hitler’s depredations but Stalin’s too—a double measure of evil."—The Wall Street Journal
An epic and uplifting World War II family history of resistance that spans Europe, telling of two happy families uprooted by war, their incredible suffering under Hitler and Stalin, and the near-miraculous survival stories of the author's mother and father.
"Moving and important."—Robert Harris, author of Act of Oblivion

In Two Roads Home beloved British journalist Daniel Finkelstein tells the extraordinary story of the years before his mother met his father—years of war and trials they barely survived.
Daniel Finkelstein's grandfather was a German Jewish intellectual leader who tolled an early warning of the impending Holocaust and became an archivist of Nazi crimes. He relocated his family to safety in Amsterdam, where they knew Anne Frank. But in those years safety was an illusion: Anne Frank famously went into hiding and Daniel's mother, Mirjam, also still a child, was sent to Bergen-Belsen with her mother and sisters.
Finkelstein's father, Ludwik, grew up in a prosperous Jewish family in Poland where his father, Dolu was a patriotic hero of the Great War. But when Stalin took control, Dolu, was deported to Siberia and Ludwik and his mother were sentenced to forced labor in Kazakhstan, starved and housed in a stable in freezing conditions.
Two Roads Home is a page-turning account of the narrow escapes, forged passports, ingenuity, bravery, and luck that allowed Mirjam and Ludwik to survive the war and find each other. Using their personal testimony, letters sent to Siberia, a diary written in Belsen, and years of historical research, Daniel Finkelstein tells what happened to two families, one the victim of the Nazis, the other of the Soviets. A tale of deliverance and triumph over evil, Two Roads Home will profoundly touch all who read it.
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    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2023

      British political columnist Finkelstein's maternal grandfather was a German Jewish intellectual who foresaw the Holocaust and led his family to Amsterdam, where they still weren't safe; as a child, Finkelstein's mother was interned in Bergen-Belsen with her mother and sisters. Eventually, the grandfather founded the Wiener Holocaust Library, the world's oldest Holocaust archive, housed at the University of London. Finkelstein's paternal grandfather, from a wealthy Polish Jewish family, was deported to Siberia during World War II while his wife and son endured forced labor in Kazakhstan. Finkelstein here blends two family stories of suffering and survival that define a tragic era in world history. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2023
      Two progenitors survive the Holocaust, against all the odds, in this extraordinary narrative. "Fascists and communists both believed...that the individuals who made up the elites needed to be eliminated by force," writes Finkelstein. His mother's side of the family was afflicted first by the former, forced into exile from Germany in the rise to power of a Nazi Party that paterfamilias Alfred Wiener foresaw after returning home from World War I. His father's side of the family, meanwhile, was similarly exiled from their home on "one of Lw�w's most prestigious and expensive streets, forced on Stalin's orders onto the steppes as agricultural laborers. Wiener organized and edited the largest Jewish newspaper in Germany before Hitler rose to power. When the Third Reich emerged, he traveled to England and the U.S. to continue his campaign, trying desperately to secure exit visas for his family. As Finkelstein writes, grimly, of Wiener's children's playmates in Amsterdam, most died in concentration camps far to the east. That the Wiener family survived involved moments of good luck coupled with small acts of defiance. The same was true of Finkelstein's forebears in the east, whose paterfamilias joined a Polish contingent of the Red Army. Stalin tolerated but mistrusted the surviving Poles and finally allowed them to travel to Iran and there join forces with the British. "The problem was that the British didn't really want them, certainly not all of them," writes the author, adding, "especially those who weren't soldiers." Nonetheless, all were eventually evacuated to England or the U.S. even though neither government wanted them until Henry Morgenthau convinced Franklin Roosevelt to establish the lifesaving War Refugee Board. Finkelstein's text, richly detailed and full of explorations of little-known corners of history, closes with an unlikely denouement given the slaughter he grimly recounts: "In the battle with Hitler and Stalin, the victory belongs to Mum and Dad." An excellent contribution to the literature of the Shoah and a moving homage to the will to endure.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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