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Subject: Holocaust Bibliography - PRA
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From: NLG Civil Liberties Committee 
Subject: Holocaust Bibliography - PRA

/* Written  9:44 am  Dec 12, 1992 by cberlet@igc.apc.org in igc:publiceye */
/* ---------- "Bibliographies" ---------- */

THE HOLOCAUST:
An Annotated Bibliography

prepared by Fred Friedman, (Friedom Research)

for Political Research Associates

Summer, 1992

===============================================================
Copyright 1992, PRA. Electronic network posting of unmodified
text is encouraged. Printing of copies is expressly forbidden.
See order information and address at end of text. PRA is an
independent non-profit institute. Donations are tax-deductible.
===============================================================

I. General

The Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945
by David S. Wyman. (Pantheon, 1984). What did America know and
when did America know it? Reveals the role of an apathetic State
Department in ignoring the evidence of the existence of several
extermination camps.

American Jewry and the Holocaust: The American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee, 1939-1945 by Yehuda Bauer. (Jerusalem:
Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew University; Detroit,
Mich.: Wayne State University Press, 1981). History and
successes/failures of this American Jewish rescue agency.

Auschwitz, Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers by
Jean-Claude Pressac. (NY: Beate Klarsfeld Foundation, 1989). 
Translated from the French, the book was written to counter the
arguments of deniers that the Holocaust ever happened, though it
is not about denial per se.

Beyond Belief: The American Press and the Coming of the
Holocaust, 1933-1945 by Deborah E. Lipstadt. (NY: Free Press,
1986).

Bibliography on Holocaust Literature by Abraham J. Edelheit and
Hershel Edelheit. (Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1986). 
One of several recent ones which includes juvenile literature.

Birkenau: The Camp of Death by Marco Nahon. (Tuscaloosa, Ala.:
University of Alabama Press, 1989).

Bitburg in Moral and Political Perspective, Geoffrey Hartman,
editor. (NY: University Press of America, 1986). Essays on the
continuing relevance of the Holocaust in the politics of the
present. Ronald Reagan visited Bitburg in a controversial,
symbolic gesture towards Germany provoking reexamination of the
moral dilemmas involved.

The Blue and the Yellow Stars of David: The Zionist Leadership in
Palestine and the Holocaust, 1939-1945 by Dina Porat. 
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1990). Porat
elaborates on her earlier book, "Leadership Entrapped" that Jewish
leaders outside of Europe did all that they could do and explains
Zionist Palestinian contacts with the Nazis.

Born Guilty: Children of Nazi Families by Peter Sichrovsky. (NY:
Basic Books, 1988). How to the descendents of Nazi war criminals
deal with their heritage? Suitable for high school readers.

Breaking the Silence by Walter Laqueur. (NY: Simon & Schuster,
1986). Continues the line of argument in "The Terrible Secret:
Suppression of the Truth About Hitler's `Final Solution"
concerning when the truth about Nazi anti-Jewish measures was
first known and first believed.

Children and Play in the Holocaust: Games Among the Shadows by
George Eisen. (Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts
Press, 1988). Semblances of normalcy and semblances of horror in
the play of Jewish children during the Nazi period.

The Courage to Care: Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust, Carol
Rittner and Sondra Myers, editors. (NY: New York University
Press, 1986). A short book about righteous gentiles who saved
Jews as a community, in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, France.

The Dynamics of Nazism: Leadership, Ideology, and the Holocaust
by Fred Weinstein. Oshkosh, Wisc.: Academic Pr., 1980. Why were
the Nazis so brutal and arrogant?

Echoes From the Holocaust: Philosophical Reflections on a Dark
Time, Alan Rosenberg and Gerald E. Myers, editors. 
(Philadelphia, Penna.: Temple University Press, 1988). The moral
and ethnical aspects of being a third party, and the ethical
disastrous consequences of being indifferent are explored.

Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil by Hannah
Arendt. (NY: Viking, 1965). A classic in that it demonstrates
that the Holocaust was not perpetrated by monsters, but by
bureaucrats. The commonplace aspects of those responsible for
mass murder is the most horrifying lesson that the Holocaust
bequeaths to the future.

End of Innocence: Anne Frank and the Holocaust by Karen Shawn. 
(NY: International Center for Holocaust Studies, Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai Brith, 1989).

Escaping the Holocaust: Illegal Immigration to the Land of
Israel, 1939-1944 by Dalia Ofer. (NY: Oxford University Press,
1990).

Fateful months: Essays on the Emergence of the Final Solution,
1941-1942 by Christopher R. Browning. (NY: Holmes & Meier,
1985). How the inputs of anti-Semites in Serbia, Yugoslavia
contributed to the institution of the Nazi `final solution.'

Generations of the Holocaust, Martin S. Bergmann and Milton E.
Jucovy, editors. (NY: Basic Books, 1982). The psychology of
holocaust survivors and their children is described by two
psychologists.

German Holocaust Literature by Susan E. Cernyak-Spatz. (NY: P.
Lang, 1985). How is the holocaust treated in general German
literature in the post-War era?

German Resistance to Hitler by Peter Hoffman. (Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1988). An `accessible' academic book
recounting the rise of the Nazis and German military and civilian
resistance to the war, specific Nazis' policies, and to the
Holocaust.

Harvest of Hate: The Nazi Program for the Destruction of the Jews
of Europe by Leon Poliakov. (NY: Schocken, 1979). Revised and
expanded edition.

The Holocaust: An Annotated Bibliography and Resource Guide, by
David M. Szonyi, editor. (Hoboken, NJ: Ktav Publishing House,
1985).

The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry, 1932-1945 by Leni
Yahil. (NY: Oxford University Press, 1990). Translated from the
Hebrew.

The Holocaust: A History of the Jews of Europe During the Second
World War by Martin Gilbert. (Boston, Mass.: Holt, Rinehart &
Winston, 1987). A huge book (over 800 pages) that is also
readable and a definitive history.

Holocaust as Historical Experience: Essays and a Discussion by
Yehuda Bauer and Nathan Rotenstreich. (NY: Holmes & Meier
Publishers, 1981). Focuses on underground activities to escape
the holocaust at the time and afterward.

Holocaust in Books and Films: A Selected, Annotated List by
Judith H. Muffs. (NY: International Center for Holocaust
Studies, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai Brith, 1986).

The Holocaust in Historical Perspective by Yehuda Bauer. 
(Seattle, Wash.: University of Washington Press, 1978). Four
essays deal with the `trucks for blood' blackmail by the Nazis,
the response of American Jews, and anti-Semitism in Europe
accounting for indifference.

Holocaust in University Teaching by Gideon Shimoni. (Oxford,
England: Pergamon Press, 1991). How to teach the Holocaust at a
university level.

Holocaust Studies: A Directory and Bibliography of Bibliographies
by Martin H. Sable. (Greenwood, Fla.: Penkevill Publishing Co.,
1987). Short resource directory and multi-subject bibliography.

Inside the Third Reich by Albert Speer. (NY: Macmillan, 1970). 
A classic in that it was written by the only Nazi to admit to
guilt at the Nuremburg trials after the Second World War. The
book was written during his 20 years in prison.

Istanbul Crossroads: Mission Impossible by Z. V. Hadari. 
(Savage, Md.: Vallentine-Mitchell, 1992). Takes the opposite
view from Dina Porat: European Jews could have been saved by
Zionist leaders in Palestine, Europe and the U.S.

Literature of Destruction: Jewish Responses to Catastrophe by
David G. Roskies. (Philadelphia, Penna.: Jewsih Publication
Society, 1989). How have Jews responded to catastrophes before
the Holocaust and how did this shape their response to the
greatest systemmatic attempt at Jewish destruction?

Methodology in the Academic Teaching of the Holocaust by Zev
Garber. (Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, 1988).

Modernity and the Holocaust by Zygmunt Bauman. (Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 1989). What causes genocide? What
would it take to happen again today?

The Murders at Bullenhuser Damm by Gunther Schwarberg. 
Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1984). Late in the
war, 20 Jewish children were executed by a Nazi doctor to cover
up evidences of immoral and unethical medical experimentation. 
The book describes the unsuccessful attempts to bring those
responsible to justice.

Nazism, Resistance & Holocaust in World War II: A Bibliography by
Vera Laska. (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1985). A
bibliography focusing on nazism and underground movements against
it.

The Origins of the Holocaust: Christian Anti-Semitism, by
Randolph L. Braham, editor. (Boulder, Colorado: Social Science
Monographs and Institute for Holocaust Studies, City University
of NY, 1986). How Christianity condones and encourages 
anti-Semitism historically and how the Nazis took political advantage
of this.

Out of the Whirlwind: A Reader of Holocaust Literature, by Albert
H. Friedlander, compiler. (NY: Schocken Books, 1976). An
anthology of personal narrative, historical commentary, and
special subjects.

The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the
Holocaust, 1938-1945 by Henry L. Feingold. (New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1970). What the US government knew,
refused to believe, cared and didn't care about and why. A very
good introduction for anyone planning to use Holocaust-oriented
archives in the US.

Probing the Limits of Representation: Nazism and the `Final
Solution', by Saul Friedlander, compiler. (Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1992). Papers from a 1990 conference
concerned with the history of historical writing (historiography)
about the Holocaust. Critiques of `the historians debate.'

Psychoanalytic Reflections on the Holocaust: Selected Essays by
Steven A. Luel. (Denver, Colorado: University of Denver Press;
NY: Ktav Publishing House, 1984).

Psychological Perspectives of the Holocaust and of its Aftermath
by Randolph L. Braham. (Boulder, Colorado: Social Science
Monographs; NY: Csengeri Institute for Holocaust Studies, City
University of New York, distributed by Columbia University Press,
1988).

Quiet Neighbors: Prosecuting Nazi War Criminals in America by
Allan A. Ryan. (San Diego, Calif.: Harcourt, Brace & Jovanovich,
1984).

Remembering for the Future: Working Papers and Addenda by Yehuda
Bauer. (Oxford, England: Pergamon Press, 1989). Papers about
Jewish-Christian relations during and after the Holocaust and its
impact on the Jewish and Christian religions and civilizations.

Rescue and Resettlement of the Jewish Refugee Children From
Europe in the United States, 1938-1945 by Esther J. Baumel. 
(Ramat Gan, Israel: Bar Ilan University Press, 1985). 
Translation of the author's Ph.D. dissertation.

Rescuers: Portraits of Moral Courage in the Holocaust by Malka
Drucker and Gay Block. (NY: Holmes & Meier, 1992). Forty-nine
Christian heroes who saved Jews during the Holocaust are
interviewed and allowed to tell their stories.

Reworking the Past: Hitler, the Holocaust, and the Historians'
Debate, by Peter Baldwin, editor. (Boston, Mass.: Beacon Press,
1990). In Europe especially, revised views about who was
responsible for the Holocaust and how many holocausts there were,
has been provoking controversy since the middle 1980s. This book
sets forth several sides.

Righteous Gentile: The Story of Raoul Wallenberg, Missing Hero of
the Holocaust by John Bierman. (NY: Viking Press, 1981). 

Screening the Holocaust: Cinema's Images of the Unimaginable by
Ilan Avisar. (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press,
1988).

Shoah: An Oral History of the Holocaust by Claude Lanzmann. 
(Pantheon, 1985). Complete text of the 9.5 hour film composed
principally of interviews with survivors, concentration camp
guards, townspeople, historians. Shoah means `holocaust' in
Hebrew.

The Terrible Secret: Suppression of the Truth About Hitler's
"Final Solution" by Walter Laqueur. (Boston, Mass.: Little,
Brown, 1980). A classic on its subject: the refusal of Western
governments, including Britain and the U.S., to believe
increasingly irrefutable evidence that the exterminations were
happening. Covers the period June, 1941 to December, 1942.

The Text of the Holocaust: A Study of Nazi Extermination
Propaganda, 1919-1945 by Caesar C. Aronsfeld. (Marblehead, Mass:
Micah Publications, 1985).

Toldot Hashoa: Hungary by Nathaniel Katzburg and Randolph Braham. 
(Yad Vashem, 1992). Comprhensive countries series focusing on
what happened, ghetto by ghetto, city by city during the
Holocaust. The first volume was on Yugoslavia, published in
1990.

Treatment of the Holocaust in Textbooks: The Federal Republic of
Germany, Israel, the United States of America by Randolph L.
Braham. (Boulder, Colorado: Social Science Monographs; NY:
Institute for Holocaust Studies, City University of New York;
distributed by Columbia University Press, 1987).

The Unmasterable Past: History, Holocaust, and German National
Identity by Charles S. Maier. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 1988). Another book about the historians
debate and revised views of the singularity of the Holocaust in
historical writing.

The War Against the Jews by Lucy Dawidowicz. (NY: Bantam, 1975). 
A standard classic asking, "How could it have happened?"

When Evils Were Most Free by George Gabori. (Ottawa, Ont.:
Deneau, 1981).

Whitewashing of the Yellow Badge: Antisemitism and Philosemitism
in Postwar Germany by Frank Stern. (Oxford, England: Vidal
Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1992). How have Germans dealt
with postwar anti-Semitism, in history and life?

Women in the Resistance and in the Holocaust: The Voices of
Eyewitnesses by Vera Laska, editor; forward by Simon Wiesenthal. 
(Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983). History and personal
narratives.

Writing and Rewriting the Holocaust: Narrative and the
Consequences of Interpretation by James E. Young. (Bloomington,
Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1988). A history of the personal
narratives: styles, emphases and what we have learned with the
passing of time.


II. Personal Narratives

Alliance for Murder: The Nazi-Ukrainian Nationalist Partnership
in Genocide by B. F. Sabrin. (NY: Sarpedon, 1991). A committee
of survivors from the western Ukraine present narratives of the
willing, enthusiastic participation in genocide of the
Ukrainians.

Boriska's Prophecy: A Story of Survival and Renewal: An
Autobiography by Alice D. Adler. (Reston, Virginia: Acropolis
Books, 1991). Narrative of Budapest, Hungary.

Breaking My Silence by Anna Eilenberg. (NY: Shengold Publishers,
1985). Narrative of Lodz, Poland.

Broken Star: The Warburgs of Altona: Their Life in Germany and
Their Death in the Holocaust by Gertrud Wenzel. (Smithtown, NY:
Exposition Press, 1981). Narrative of Hamburg, Germany.

Children of the Ghetto by Sheva Glas-Wiener. (Fitzroy, Victoria:
Globe Press, 1983). Collective narrative of Lodz, Poland.

Children of the Holocaust: Conversations with Sons and Daughters
of Survivors by Helen Epstein. (NY: Putnam, 1979). Collective
biography from a psychological perspective.

David: The Testimony of a Holocaust Survivor by Ezra Ben
Gersh'om. (Oxford, England: Oswald Wolff Books, distributed by
St. Martin's Press, 1988).

Determined! by Benjamin Balshone. (NY: Bloch Publishing Co.,
1984). Narrative of Budapest, Hungary.

The Doctor and the Damned by Albert Haas. (NY: St. Martin's
Press, 1984). Narrative of France.

Doctor Number 117641: A Holocaust Memoir by Louis J. Micheels. 
(New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1989).

"Gizelle, Save the Children!" by Peggy Mann. (NY: Everest House,
1980). Narrative of several countries.

Growing Up in the Holocaust by Ben Edelbaum. (Kansas City,
Missouri: Edelbaum, 1980). Narrative of Poland.

Holocaust in Hungary: An Anthology of Jewish Response, by Andrew
Handler, editor. (Tuscaloosa, Ala.: University of Alabama Press,
1982).

Holocaust Testimonies: The Ruins of Memory by Lawrence L. Langer. 
(New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1991). Psychological
aspects of personal narratives.

How Dark the Heavens: 1400 Days Under German Occupation by Sidney
Iwens. (NY: Shengold Publishers, 1990). Narratives of
Lithuania, Latvia and Byelorussia (Belarus).

I Didn't Say Goodbye by Claudine Vegh. (NY: Dutton, 1984). 
Narrative of France.

I Promised My Mother by Ludvik Wieder. (NY: Shengold Publishers,
1984). Narrative of Hungary.

I Was Called Bronislawsa by ____________. (Israel: Hakibbutz
Hameuhad, 1992). Narrative of a young Jewish woman who
successfully pretended to be a Pole in Auschwitz.

If Not Now, When? If Not Us, Who? by Primo Levi. (NY: Viking
Penguin, 1986). Classic narrative of Jewish resistance in
Central Europe.

Jewish Memories by Lucette Valensi. (Berkeley, Calif.:
University of California Press, 1991). Narrative of France in
oral history form.

Maus II by Art Spiegelman. (NY: Pantheon, 1992). Ingenious
cartoon format autobiography, biography and Holocaust memoir of
the author's parents where the Nazis are cats and their victims,
mice. Sequel to "Maus" (Pantheon, 1986).

Surviving the Holocaust: The Kovno Ghetto Diary by Avraham Tory. 
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1990).

"Take Care of Josette": A Memoir in Defense of Occupied France by
Jacqueline Wolf. (NY: Franklin Watts, 1981).

Twelve Who Survived: An Oral History of the Jews of Lodz, Poland,
1930-1954 by Lillian Kranitz-Sanders. (NY: Irvington Publishers,
1983).

Underground Army: Fighters of the Bialystok Ghetto by Haikah
Grosman. (NY: Holocaust Library, 1987).

Unfinished Road: Jewish Survivors of Latvia Look Back by Gertrude
Schneider. (NY: Praeger, 1991).

When Memory Comes by Saul Friedlander. (NY: Farrar, Strauss &
Giroux, 1979). Narrative of France.

Witnesses to the Holocaust: An Oral History, by Rhoda G. Lewin,
editor. (Boston, Mass: Twayne Publishers, 1990).


III. "It Wasn't Just the Nazis..."

Accounting for Genocide: National Responses and Jewish
Victimization During the Holocaust by Helen Fein. (NY: Free
Press, 1979). What did the governments and the peoples of other
countries say about the Holocaust at the time and afterward?

Atlas of the Holocaust by Martin Gilbert. (Oxford, England:
Pergamon Press, 1988). Combines geography and history from 1918
to trace the destruction of European Jews including post-war
killings and escapes up to 1950.

Genocide and Retribution: The Holocaust in Hungarian-Ruled
Northern Transylvania by Randolph L. Braham. (Boston, Mass:
Kluwer-Nijhoff, 1983). The Rumanians were willing participants
in the exterminations of Jews and Gypsies.

The Italians and the Holocaust: Persecution, Rescue, and Survival
by Susan Zuccotti. (NY: Basic Books, 1987).

Mussolini and the Jews by Meir Michaelis. (London: Oxford
University Press, 1978). Diplomatic history of relations with
the Nazis spanning two decades.

One by One by One: Facing the Holocaust by Judith Miller. (NY:
Simon & Schuster, 1990). A journalist interviews contemporary
Germans, Austrians, Russians, and Americans for their memory and
beliefs about the Holocaust, finding much of the results mythical
and self-deceptive.

Petain's Crime: The Full Story of French Collaboration in the
Holocaust by Paul Webster. (Chicago, Ill.: I. R. Dee, 1991).

Pius the Twelfth and the Third Reich by Saul Friedlander. (NY:
Knopf, 1966). Vatican policy toward the Nazis regarding the
Holocaust.

Vatican Diplomacy and the Jews During the Holocaust, 1939-1943 by
John F. Morley. (NY: Ktav Publishing House, 1980).

Vichy France and the Jews by Michael Marrus and Robert Paxton. 
(NY: Basic Books, 1981). The French role in destruction.


IV. Documentary Collections

Audio-Visual Resources for Teaching the Holocaust by St. Louis
Center for Holocaust Studies. (St. Louis, Missouri: Center for
Holocaust Studies, 1980-1983).

Children We Remember: Photographs From the Archives of Yad Vashem
by Chana B. Abells. (NY: Greenwillow Books, 1986).

Documents on the Holocaust: Selected Sources on the Destruction
of the Jews of Germany and Austria, Poland, and the Soviet Union,
by Yitzhak Arad, et. al., editors. (Jerusalem, Israel: Yad
Vashem; NY: Ktav Publishing House, 1981).

European Jewish Communities, 1933-1945: Histories, Memoirs,
Diaries, Memorial Books: With Supplement: Books on Concentration
Camps by University of California Library. (Los Angeles, Calif.:
University of California Library, 1975).

Films of the Holocaust: An Annotated Filmography of Collections
in Israel by Sheba F. Skirball. (NY: Garland Publishers, 1990).

Guide to Yale University Library Holocaust Video Testimonies by
Fortunoff Video Archive. (NY: Garland Publishers, 1990).

The Holocaust: Selected Documents in Eighteen Volumes, by John
Mendelsohn, editor. (NY: Garland Publishers, 1982).

The Holocaust, Israel, and the Jews: Motion Pictures in the
National Archives by Charles L. Gellert. (Washington, DC:
National Archives & Records Administration, 1989).

Holocaust Oral History Subject Catalog, by Brana Gurewitsch,
project director. (Brooklyn, NY: The Center for Holocaust
Studies, 1979?).

Indelible Shadows: Film and the Holocaust by Annette Insdorf. 
(Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1989).

This Shall Tell All Ages: Art, Music, and Writings of the
Holocaust. (NY: United Jewish Appeal, 1981).


V. Holocaust Deniers and Opponents

Anne Frank's Diary: A Hoax by Ditlieb Felderer. (Torrance,
Calif.: Institute for Historical Review, 1979). The Institute
for Historical Review is the basic US institution which denies
the Holocaust ever happened. This book purports to explain the
impossibility of Anne Frank having written her famous diary.

Denying the Holocaust by Israel Gutman. (Jerusalem, Israel:
Shazar Library, Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew
University, 1985). Exposes the ideological agenda of neo-Nazis
and others in denying the Holocaust's historicity.

Holocaust: 120 Questions and Answers by Charles E. Weber. 
(Torrance, Calif.: Institute for Historical Review, 1983). Slim
volume (59 pages) of Holocaust denial.

Hoax of the Twentieth Century: The Case Against the Presume
Extermination of European Jewry by Arthur R. Butz. (Torrance,
Calif.: Institute for Historical Review, 1983). Holocaust denial
argument which begins to demonstrate the contemporary 
anti-Semitism behind this movement.

IHR Newsletter (Torrance, Calif.: IHR, 1982). Newsletter of the
Holocaust denial group, Institute for Historical Review.

In Answer: The Holocaust: Is the Story True?: Why Did the World
Community Not Respond?: What are the Lessons? by Franklin H.
Littell, et. al. (West Chester, Penna.: Sylvan, 1988). 
Discussion of why denial of the Holocaust is now taking place.

Journal of Historical Review (Torrance, Calif.: IHR, 1976). 
Journal of the Holocaust denial group, Institute for Historical
Review.

Made In Russia: The Holocaust by Carlos W. Porter. (Historical
Review Press, 1988). Denial that the Holocaust was carried out
by the Nazis. Instead, the Russians were the true perpetrators
according to this tiresome book.

Trust Betrayed: The Story of Jim Keegstra by David J. Bercuson. 
(Toronto, Ont.: Double Canada; Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1985). 

Truth Prevails: Demolishing Holocaust Denial: The End of "The
Leuchter Report" by Shelly Shapiro. (NY: Beate Klarsfeld
Foundation, 1990). Combats Holocaust denial.


VI. Juvenile literature.

Don't They Know the World Stopped Breathing?: Reminiscences of a
French Child During the Holocaust Years by Renee Fersen-Osten. 
(NY: Shapolsky, 1991). 

Erika: Poems of the Holocaust by William Heyen. (NY: Vanguard
Press, 1984).

Facing History and Ourselves: Holocaust and Human Behavior:
Annotated Bibliography by Margaret A. Drew. (NY: Walker, 1988). 
The bibliographic component of this teaching manual for teaching
teachers is suitable for finding fiction and some nonfiction
suitable for junior and senior high school children.

Hitler's War Against the Jews: A Young Reader's Version of `The
War Against the Jews, 1933-1945 by Lucy Dawidowicz, by David A.
Altshuler. (NY: Behrman House, 1978). Lucy Dawidowicz' classic
history of the Holocaust is intended for adults. David
Altschuler wrote a childrens' version discussing the growth of
anti-Semitism in Germany since the 16th century.

Holocaust: A History of Courage and Resistance by Bea Stadtler. 
(NY: Behrman House, 1974). Describes the experience of Jews in
Europe during the Third Reich.

My Brother's Keeper: The Holocaust Through the Eyes of an Artist
by Israel Bernbaum. (NY: Putnam, 1985). Tells the story of how
this artist tries to explain the Holocaust in his art.

Nazi Hunter, Simon Wiesenthal by Iris Noble. (NY: J. Messner,
1979). Typical young adult biography.

Never to Forget: The Jews of the Holocaust by Milton Meltzer.
(NY: Harper Collins Childrens Books, 1991). History of the
Holocaust focusing on the destruction and the resistance of the
Jews.

The Promise of a New Spring: The Holocaust and Renewal by Gerda
W. Klein. (Chappauqua, NY: Rossel Books, 1981). Not seen.

They Fought Back: The Story of the Jewish Resistance in Nazi
Europe by Yuri Suhl. (NY: Schocken, 1987). An anthology of
accounts of Jewish resistance to the Nazis.

============================================================

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