A True Story of Family and Survival
Initially, I was surprised to see this written in the third person and I wasn't sure how I was going to take to it as I'm accustomed to Holocaust memoirs where they're more like a diary of sorts (if not literally a diary). I'm glad I didn't let my assumption stop me from adjusting as I ended up enjoying the way it was told through the third person narrative.
Father and son Gustav and Fritz Kleinmann were arrested and sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp. They survive there together for some time before Gustav learns he's going to be sent to Auschwitz. Refusing to be separated, Fritz insists on being taken as well.
I found Gustav and Fritz's story touching and inspiring. I also found some of the history to be unique compared to many other books I've read from this era. For example, early on in the book it discusses the lead-up to the war and the descriptions of the Nazi's taunts in such a vivid way that also depicts that their prejudice was not only toward the Jewish people but many others. In many ways, it felt like a novel because it was so atmospheric.