One Hundred Miracles: Music, Auschwitz, Survival and Love
By (Author) Zuzana Ruzickova
By (author) Wendy Holden
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
1st December 2020
14th May 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: general
Memoirs
The Holocaust
Second World War
Music
786.4092
Paperback
368
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 26mm
288g
The remarkable memoir of Zuzana Ruickov, Holocaust survivor and world-famous harpsichordist. 'Extraordinary' Sunday Times 'Compelling' Daily Telegraph Zuzana Ruickov grew up in 1930s Czechoslovakia dreaming of two things: Johann Sebastian Bach and the piano. But her peaceful, melodic childhood was torn apart when, in 1939, the Nazis invaded. Uprooted from her home, transported from Auschwitz to Hamburg to Bergen-Belsen, bereaved, starved, and afflicted with crippling injuries to her musicians hands, the teenage Zuzana faced a series of devastating losses. Yet with every truck and train ride, a small slip of paper printed with her favourite piece of Bachs music became her talisman. Armed with this proof that beauty still existed, Zuzanas fierce bravery and passion ensured her survival of the greatest human atrocities of all time, and would continue to sustain her through the brutalities of post-war Communist rule. Harnessing her talent and dedication, and fortified by the love of her husband, the Czech composer Viktor Kalabis, Zuzana went on to become one of the twentieth centurys most renowned musicians and the first harpsichordist to record the entirety of Bachs keyboard works. Zuzanas story, told here in her own words before her death in 2017, is a profound and powerful testimony of the horrors of the Holocaust, and a testament in itself to the importance of amplifying the voices of its survivors today. It is also a joyful celebration of art and resistance that defined the life of the first lady of the harpsichord a woman who spent her life being ceaselessly reborn through her music.
[An] extraordinary memoir A moving record of a life well lived in the face of appalling obstacles -- Nick Rennison * Sunday Times *
A compelling story of terrible suffering surmounted by incredible bravery -- Anne de Courcy * Daily Telegraph *
[Zuzanas] humanity shines through all the inhumanity Vivid and moving -- The Jewish Chronicle
Zuzana Ruickov was a celebrated Czech harpsichordist and a survivor of three Nazi concentration and slave labour camps. She recorded over one hundred albums, performed across the world to great acclaim, and became an influential teacher at the Prague Academy. Zuzana died in Prague in 2017 aged ninety. Wendy Holden is the author of more than thirty published titles, many of them about the lives of remarkable women. A journalist and former war correspondent, she wrote Born Survivors, about three mothers and their babies who survived the Holocaust. She lives in Suffolk, England.