cover rub marks, scratches, and edge wear. some cover and page corners bent, curled, and worn. no marks on text. 340 pages. 9" x 9". Holocaust Library paperback. |
Interned for years by the Nazis in the Janowska slave labor camp in Lvov, Poland, Leon Wells was consigned to a Sonderkommando unit, the Death Brigade, tasked to obliterate with bonfire and a bone-crushing machine all traces of the daily murders perpetuated in that camp. In this classic Holocaust memoir, now restored to print, Mr. Wells eloquently recalls his experiences, describing life beyond imagination in its suffering and loss. Through it all, Mr. Wells, though only in his teens, exhibited an enduring will to survive. Leon and his family were Jews residing in the Polish province of Galicia, when the Germans occupied the region. Marched down the Janowska Road to the slave labor camp, Wells eventually escaped, was recaptured, and was assigned to the work detail forced to erase the evidence of the Third Reich's guilt. Having lost his mother, father, and all six siblings one by one to these same killers, Wells miraculously escaped again and went into hiding until the liberation, later testifying at the Nuremberg trials and the Eichmann trial.