categories
- Traffic and Vehicles Catalogue
- socreal.catalog
- Advertisement Catalogue
- Photo Catalogue
- Chinese and Japanese Catalogue
- New Holy Card Catalogue II.
- 12 interesting old books
- Books
- Bibliophil
- Antiques
- Engraving
- Maps
- Photos
- Antique Papers, Small Prints
- Posters
- Circus
- Modern Graphics
- Socialist Realism
- NER Propaganda
- Others
cart
Cart is empty
You've not logged in
Szép Ernő : The Smell of Humans - A Memoir of the Holocaust in Hungary
- description
- additional information
Translated by John Bátki.
With an introductory essay by Dezső Tandori.
Hungary 1944: By early June Adolf Eichmann has succeeded in deporting 400,000 Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz. Over the summer the protection afforded by neutral states saves the líves of thousands, among them the poet, playwright and novelist Ernő Szép. Then, on 15 October, comes the Nazi-assisted Arrow Cross takeover. Six days later the 60-year-old writer, along with all the other men in the apartment house, is dragged away for forced labour. The Smell of Humans recapitulates the events following the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944, and then narrates the 19-day story of the forced march, the Arison camp at the brick factory, the digging of trenches outside Budapest, the round-the-clock exposure to the elements and to the whims of the guards (ranging from taunts to summary executions), until the release of the author three weeks later, when the regular army took the labourers out of the hands of the Arrow Cross henchmen.
With an introductory essay by Dezső Tandori.
Hungary 1944: By early June Adolf Eichmann has succeeded in deporting 400,000 Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz. Over the summer the protection afforded by neutral states saves the líves of thousands, among them the poet, playwright and novelist Ernő Szép. Then, on 15 October, comes the Nazi-assisted Arrow Cross takeover. Six days later the 60-year-old writer, along with all the other men in the apartment house, is dragged away for forced labour. The Smell of Humans recapitulates the events following the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944, and then narrates the 19-day story of the forced march, the Arison camp at the brick factory, the digging of trenches outside Budapest, the round-the-clock exposure to the elements and to the whims of the guards (ranging from taunts to summary executions), until the release of the author three weeks later, when the regular army took the labourers out of the hands of the Arrow Cross henchmen.
condition: | |
category: | Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > |
publisher: | Corvina-CEU Press, (1994) |
item number / ISBN: | 9789631339895 |
binding: | paperback |
pages: | XXVI, 173 |
language: | English |