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The Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz: A Story of Survival (Hardback)
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The Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz: A Story of Survival (Hardback)

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Hardback 400 Pages
Published: 27/03/2025
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Waterstones Says

From the award-winning historian and author of Les Parisiennes and That Woman comes an arresting, carefully-researched examination of the Auschwitz-Birkenau orchestra assembled of women prisoners, for whom music became both the means to survive and that forced them to participate in a Nazi propaganda project.

What role could music play in a death camp? What was the effect on those women who owed their survival to their participation in a Nazi propaganda project? And how did it feel to be forced to provide solace to the perpetrators of a genocide that claimed the lives of their family and friends?

In 1943, German SS officers in charge of Auschwitz-Birkenau ordered that an orchestra should be formed among the female prisoners. Almost fifty women and girls from eleven nations were assembled to play marching music to other inmates - forced labourers who left each morning and returned, exhausted and often broken, at the end of the day - and give weekly concerts for Nazi officers. Individual members were sometimes summoned to give solo performances of an officer's favourite piece of music. It was the only entirely female orchestra in any of the Nazi prison camps and, for almost all of the musicians chosen to take part, being in the orchestra was to save their lives. In The Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz, award-winning historian Anne Sebba tells their astonishing story with sensitivity and care.

Publisher: Orion Publishing Co
ISBN: 9781399610735
Number of pages: 400
Weight: 615 g
Dimensions: 236 x 160 x 40 mm


MEDIA REVIEWS

Impressive . . . Sebba's command of detail is superb. She quite rightly outlines the atrocities of the sadists, psychopaths and savages whom Auschwitz seemed to attract like a magnet; but also the resilience and courage of a group of women who refused to be beaten by evil, and used music to save their lives - Simon Heffer, TELEGRAPH

Anne Sebba tells this harrowing story with tremendous rigour and care, capturing both the complex horror of the women's situation and the dignity and bravery with which they faced it. An impressive, important, deeply moving book - SARAH WATERS

An important book, powerfully written, carefully researched. The frightening and discordant notes of Auschwitz can be he heard through an ensemble of compelling voices, voices we must never forget - THOMAS HARDING

Anne Sebba brings meticulous research and a brilliant writer's eye to one of the darkest questions of World War II. What would you do to survive and what might be the price? - ANTHONY HOROWITZ

An important record of the incomprehensible cruelty perpetrated in Auschwitz, using music as an instrument of torture. But for those who played, it was a path to survival - VICTORIA HISLOP

If you read just one book about Auschwitz and the Holocaust, make it this. The author tells a story of how darkness beyond the imagination could never extinguish the light of humanity at its brightest, bravest and best - ANTHONY SELDON

An important addition to our understanding of Auschwitz, of women's experiences during the Shoah, of the power of music to resist the overwhelming forces of dehumanisation and most especially of the apparent paradox that the killers could cherish beautiful music at one moment and then resume their monstrous killing the next. The research is prodigious, the stories gripping. The book deepens all that we know and shows that examining one subset of the victims of Auschwitz, only enhances our understanding of life within the camp - MICHAEL BERENBAUM, Distinguished Professor of Jewish Studies

Anne Sebba's groundbreaking study reminds us of the sheer insanity, perversity and uniqueness of the Holocaust - where some of Europe's most accomplished citizens, its Jewish musicians, were made to play music as they witnessed their relatives and fellow Jews being gassed - TOM GROSS

Anne Sebba has done it again. In this superb and timely book about an extraordinary, and often overlooked slice, of WWII history, Sebba succeeds in presenting complex, conflicting and challenging questions - survival, choice, collaboration, friendship, in the worst of circumstances - with great intelligence and, most of all, with compassion. She dares the reader to stand in the shoes of those who lived through these brutal and appalling times. Rigorously researched and elegantly written, this is the biography of the women's orchestra of Auschwitz we need. Magnificent - KATE MOSSE

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