The Stone Crusher: The True Story of a Father and Son's Fight for Survival in Auschwitz
Couldn't load pickup availability
About this book
Sophie Brody Award Honorable Mention In 1939 Gustav Kleinmann a Jewish upholsterer in Vienna was arrested by the Nazis. Along with his sixteen-year-old son Fritz he was sent to Buchenwald in Germany where a new concentration camp was being built. It was the beginning of a six-year odyssey almost without parallel. They helped build Buchenwald young Fritz learning construction skills which would help preserve him from extermination in the coming years. But it was his bond with his father that would ultimately keep them both alive. When the fifty-year-old Gustav was transferred to Auschwitza certain death sentenceFritz was determined to go with him. His wiser friends tried to dissuade himIf you want to keep living you have to forget your father one said. But that was impossible and Fritz pleaded for a place on the Auschwitz transport. He is a true comrade Gustav wrote in his secret diary always at my side. The boy is my greatest joy. We are inseparable. Gustav kept his diary hidden throughout his six years in the death campseven Fritz knew nothing of it. From this diary Fritzs own accounts and other eyewitness testimony Jeremy Dronfield has constructed a riveting tale of a father-son bond that proved stronger than the machine that sought to break them both.
