The Mascot
By (Author) Mark Kurzem
Penguin Random House Australia
Penguin Random House Australia
3rd August 2009
Australia
General
Non Fiction
The Holocaust
Second World War
Modern warfare
940.53
Paperback
352
Width 131mm, Height 198mm, Spine 27mm
268g
One summer's day in 1997, Mark Kurzem returned home to find his father on his doorstep. Alex Kurzem had travelled halfway round the world to reveal a long-kept secret, and now wanted his son's help to piece together his past and his identity. As a five-year-old during the Second World War, Alex Kurzem had watched from a tree as his entire village, including his family, were murdered by a German-led execution squad. He scavenged in the forests of Russia for several months before falling into the hands of a Latvian SS company. After one soldier discovered this young boy was actually Jewish, Alex was made to promise never to reveal his true identity - to forget his old life, his family, and even his name. The young boy became the company's mascot and part of the Nazi propaganda machine responsible for killing his own people. After the war Alex was adopted and his new family made a home in Australia, far from the sites of wartime atrocities. But after fifty years of holding on to this childhood secret, Alex needed to discover and share the astonishing truth about his past.
Jaw-droppingpowerful subject matter.
"Chicago Sun-Times"
aJaw-droppinga]powerful subject matter.a
a"Chicago Sun-Times"
"Part mystery, part memory puzzle, it is written in the polished style of a good thriller, and it is spellbinding."
Dinitia Smith, "The New York Times"
Mark Kurzem grew up in Melbourne, Australia. He read Anthropology at the University of Oxford where he was a Commonwealth Scholar. He also holds degrees from the Universities of Tokyo and Sofia. Today, he divides his time between Oxford and Tokyo.