Run and Hide: How Jewish Youth Escaped the Holocaust
By (Author) Don Brown
Illustrated by Don Brown
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
Clarion Books
31st January 2024
7th December 2023
United States
Young Adult
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: History and the past
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Warfare, battles, armed forces
940.5318
Hardback
192
Width 168mm, Height 260mm
699g
A gripping nonfiction graphic novel that follows the stories of Jewish children, separated from their parents, who escaped the horrors of the Holocaust.From the Sibert Honor and YALSA Awardwinning creator behindThe Unwanted,Drowned City,and others.
In the tightening grip of Hitlers power, towns, cities, and ghettoes were emptied of Jews. Unless they could escape, Jewish children would not be spared their deadly fate in the Holocaust, a tragedy of unfathomable depth. Only 11% of the Jewish children living in Europe before 1939 survived the Second World War.
Run and Hide tells the stories of these children, forced to leave their homes and families, as they escaped certain horror. Some children flee to England by train. Others are hidden from Nazis, sometimes in plain sight. Some are secreted away in attics and farmhouses. Still others make miraculous escapes, cresting over the snow-covered Pyrenees mountains to safety.
Acclaimed nonfiction storyteller Don Brown brings his expertise for journalistic reporting to the deeply felt personal narratives of Jewish children who survived against overwhelming odds.
Read more books by Don Brown:
"A powerful account focusing on the fates of Jewish children during the Holocaust.Vivid, devastating, and impressively documented." Kirkus Reviews
Don Brown is the author of Thunder in the Morning Calm, The Malacca Conspiracy, The Navy Justice Series and Black Sea Affair, a submarine thriller that predicted the 2008 shooting war between Russia and Georgia. Don served five years in the U.S. Navy as an officer in the Judge Advocate General's (JAG) Corps, which gave him an exceptional vantage point into both the Navy and the inner workings of "inside-the-beltway" as an action officer assigned to the pentagon. He left active duty in 1992 to pursue private practice, but remained on inactive status through 1999, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Commander. He and his family live in North Carol