Description
At only six months old, Wally's entire Jewish family moves from their home country of Poland to France, fleeing the Nazi regime as it rolls across Europe. Their new life is interrupted in 1939 when Germany invades Poland, overtaking France in 1940. As the Jewish people of France begin to experience the effects of their invaders, the threat becomes more clear to the family, leading Wally's parents to make difficult choices for their children's safety.
Sent to the supposedly safe Alps with her sisters as the rest of the family stays behind in Paris, Wally's daily life is reduced to a cycle of survival and fear, with the occasional carefree happiness that only young people can experience. But as the war draws to a close, the question remains -- Will they have a family to return to?
Based on the true story of Wally Aviam, Winter '43: A Young Girl's Story follows Wally's life and the parallel historical events of the time, as recounted to Valerie Villieu and visually captured by Belgian artist Antoine Houcke using a blend of artistic mediums, grounded in images historical imagery. Includes a forward from historian Annette Wieviorka.
Reviews
"The paralleling of Wally's personal story which accumulates tragic episodes (clandestine life, arrest of brother Beno in 1941, parents in 1942, survival...) and historical events (declaration of war, exodus, invasion of the free zone... ) works particularly well. We easily get attached to Wally's journey, both singular and representative of the destiny of so many other Jewish families in France crushed by the Holocaust." -- The Foundation for the Memory of the Shoah
Book Information
ISBN 9781643378640
Author Valerie Villieu
Format Paperback
Page Count 192
Imprint Life Drawn
Publisher Humanoids, Inc
Weight(grams) 261g
Dimensions(mm) 259mm * 193mm * 12mm