Results for Stories About Love And Memory After The Holocaust, Whether Fiction Or Non-fiction — Like Primo Levi's "the Periodic Table"
Our search tries its best to match you with stories that fit your request, but results may vary based on keywords and what's available. If you don't find what you're looking for, try a different search.
Listing 1770 stories.
In a bridge-building reconciliation workshop between Jews and Nazi descendants, a Jewish woman and a Nazi descendant attempt to connect with each other. At the conclusion of the workshop, wounds have not been healed, but perhaps a greater understanding has been reached.
After an esteemed professor of anthropology writes a memoir detailing her family's experience during the Holocaust, an elderly woman reaches out, insisting that she is the professor's long-lost cousin.
In this science fiction story the last holocaust survivor dies, leaving his granddaughter to carry his memories through a recording technology. The granddaughter of the last holocaust survivor struggles with her grandfather's death, and family tensions around her gentile boyfriend while crafting a plan to shut up holocaust deniers once and for all.
A neglected little girl conjures memories of her babysitter's tragic past. Just for the night, the two find an antidote to loss in each other.
An aging Jewish woman who escaped the Nazi occupation of Poland plans a Passover meal for her family in 20th century New York. Her family worries that she's losing her mind, but she worries what is really being lost is her memory.
A series of "sketches" illustrating the perverse and horrific crimes perpetrated by soldiers during WW2.
A seventeen-year-old Jewish boy reflects on his life as he lies gushing out blood, on the brink of death, in Germany at the end of World War II.
A woman tells the story of her father's mother, a Jewish woman from Germany who moves to Latvia to marry an older man during the middle of the twentieth century, to her daughter. The woman reminds her daughter to be cautious of dreamers and to always read the news so that she does not end up with the same fate as that of the grandmother.
In the 1930s, after flunking out of college, a young American man travels to Vienna where he meets a Jewish girl living on the floor below him. He returns home a few months later, but when the Nazis invade Vienna he can't help but think of the girl he once knew.
A Jewish-American man returns from World War II to an excruciating situation: he must tell his parents and his fiancee that he is settling in Israel. During their heartbreaking reunion, he and his family confront what it means to belong and debate how the Jewish people can achieve it.
