Let me tell you a story A memoir of a wartime childhood

Renata Calverley, 1937-

Book - 2013

"Przemysl, Poland, 1939. No one has explained to two-year-old Renatka what war is. She knows her Tatus, a doctor, is away with the Polish Army, that her beautiful Mamusia is no longer allowed to work at the university, and that their frequent visitors among them Great Aunt Zuzia and Great Uncle Julek with their gifts of melon and clothes have stopped appearing. One morning Mamusia comes home with little yellow six-pointed stars for them to wear. Renatka thinks they will keep her family safe. In June of 1942, soldiers in gray-green uniforms take Renata, Mamusia, and grandmother Babcia to the Ghetto where they are crammed into one room with other frightened families. The adults are forced to work long hours at the factory and to survive ...on next to no food. One day Mamusia and Babcia do not return from their shifts. Six years old and utterly alone, Renata is passed from place to place and survives through the willingness of ordinary people to take the most deadly risks. Her unlikely blonde hair and blue eyes and other twists of fate save her life but stories become her salvation. Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales transport her to an enchanted world; David Copperfield helps her cope on her own. A chronicle of the horrors of war, Let Me Tell You a Story is a powerful and moving memoir of growing up in a traumatic world, and of the magical discovery of books." -- Book jacket

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Subjects
Published
New York : Bloomsbury 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Renata Calverley, 1937- (-)
Edition
First U.S. Edition
Physical Description
340 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781620401491
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Crediting her love of both oral and written stories with her ability to retreat from the terrors of everyday life, Calverley recounts her own story as a young Jewish child in Holocaust-era Poland in this emotive memoir. Digging deep into the hidden crevices of her memory, she recalls her early years with her beloved mother and grandmother, their removal to the ghetto, her own miraculous escape from the ghetto, the series of hiding places she endured, and her post-war reunion with her father in England. Learning to live with the constant threat of discovery and death, Calverley luckily was provided with a natural disguise in her blonde hair and blue eyes, while her quick imagination and appreciation of literature provided her with spiritual solace. In addition to relating her own harrowing experiences, she also breathes life into the overarching horrors of this juncture in history. As the number of living survivors dwindles, each new firsthand account represents an important contribution to the literature of the Holocaust.--Flanagan, Margaret Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In a burnished memoir, Calverley, a retired English teacher in Oxford, England, recreates her wartime years in Poland in the voice of a young, well-to-do Jewish child who is separated from her mother and shunted off to various safe houses. Blond-haired and blue-eyed, Calverley had grown up in Przemysl, the only child of a doctor who enlisted with the Polish army and a mother who taught literature at the university. After the Nazi invasion of 1939, the family was relocated to the ghetto and forced to wear yellow stars, and the mother was dismissed from her teaching job, leaving the child uncomprehending and profoundly shaken. Her mother and grandmother were taken away in September 1943, and Calverley, then nearly six, was abandoned to a series of caretakers-from her former wet nurse Marynia, who got her out of the ghetto under her skirts, to various relatives and Polish partisans, who are portrayed with particular brutishness. A stint in a nasty orphanage with a horrid older bully named Jorik capped Calverley's episodic wartime saga. She makes it through these difficult years by losing herself in books-favorites include works by Hans Christian Andersen and Charles Dickens-until finally being rescued by her doting aunt and uncle back in Przemysl. Calverley's memoir is no fairy tale-she brings the horrors of war vividly to life-but her survival is miraculous. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved