After the Darkness: Reflections on the Holocaust | 
| Author: Elie Wiesel Publisher: Schocken Category: Book
List Price: $20.00 Buy New: $11.51 You Save: $8.49 (42%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 112140
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 48 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 10.4 x 0.6
ISBN: 0805241825 Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5318 EAN: 9780805241822 ASIN: 0805241825
Publication Date: October 22, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: DJ shows very minor shefwear - otherwise excellent -- SHIPS FAST!!! C22
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Product Description A poignant, powerful distillation of the Holocaust experience from the internationally acclaimed writer and Nobel laureate.
In his first book, Night, Elie Wiesel described his concentration camp experience, but he has rarely written directly about the Holocaust since then. Now, as the last generation of survivors is passing and a new generation must be introduced to mankind’s darkest hour, Wiesel sums up the most important aspects of Hitler’s years in power and provides a fitting memorial to those who suffered and perished. He writes about the creation of the Third Reich, Western acquiescence, the gas chambers, and memory. He criticizes Churchill and Roosevelt for what they knew and ignored, and he praises little-known Jewish heroes. Augmenting Wiesel’s text are testimonies from survivors, who recall, among other moments and events: the establishment of the Nurembourg Laws, Kristallnacht, transport to the camps, and liberation.
With this book — richly illustrated with 45 photographs from the U.S. Holocaust Museum -- Wiesel proves once again the ineluctable importance of bearing witness.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
after the darkness February 16, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I believe this book is a wonderful introduction to the history and events leading up to, and including the horrible years of the holocaust. I gave it to my grandaughter who is ten years old. I am a child of a survivor. The book is a valuable part of education of a time that now seems so distant, and when most of the survivors have died. It speaks for them to future generations nd as always, Elie Wiesel is warm, and honest, but never bitter. We are now the witnesses for those who experienced hell.
Yes of course, ""Reflection on the Holocaust""!!! October 10, 2006 47 out of 57 found this review helpful
Those who do not believe that there was, and still is, a legend in the name of 'Holocaust' are kindly invited to visit Ghaza and Lebanon (North and notably South) to look and see how such a word is actually pronounced. They will see a thorough destruction involving extensive loss of life through a carnage of fire and cold-blood slaughter of civilians.
Thank you.
Powerful, Haunting September 7, 2006 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
Dare to stick you head and heart into the cruelity of mankind and you come away from this powerful book enlightened--and looking over your shoulder at today's racism. An equally moving book is Walking the Trail, One Man's Journey Along the Cherokee Trail of Tears by Jerry Ellis.
Excellent Book June 22, 2006 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is the third book I read by Elie Wiesel, first I read "Night" which is my favorite, second I read "The Forgotten" which I thought was very good too. Now this one, is much shorter but the tetimonials by other Holocaust victims and the photographs makes it an excellent book. The generation of WWII survivors are dying and we need books like these to keep reminding us and future generations of the horrors of the war, so we don't repeat it.
A short overview of history's greatest evil May 4, 2005 16 out of 20 found this review helpful
Elie Wiesel is the writer who more than any other made the world aware of the Holocaust. He through the years has been a voice of remembrance for the victims, a voice of integrity and courage, a witness of what is the greatest example of Man's inhumanity to Man known in human history. For the Holocaust was the deliberate effort of Nazi Germany, a people sitting in the center of Europpean civilization to wholly destroy, man, woman and child the entire Jewish people. One third of the Jewish people was murdered in the years 1939-1945, and the greatest share of European Jewry destroyed. Now in this work Elie Wiesel presents a small historical over-view of the Shoah, and accompanies this with testimonies of others who passed through this world of nightmare. It is a short moving volume, another work of invaluable testimony.
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