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Let Me Go
Contributor(s): Schneider, Helga (Author)
ISBN: 0143035177     ISBN-13: 9780143035176
Publisher: Penguin Adult Hc/Tr
OUR PRICE:   $22.80  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: August 2005
Qty:
Annotation: A powerful memoir in which Helga Schneider describes her relationship and final encounter with her mother, a former SS guard at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
In 1998, Schneider is summoned to her 90 year-old mother's nursing home in Vienna. The last time she has seen her mother is 27 years earlier. Then, she had asked her to try on her treasured SS uniform, and wanted to give her several items of jewellery, the loot of holocaust victims, which Schneider rejected. Prior to that meeting, the last time she had seen her mother was in 1941, when she was four. Her mother abandoned her family in order to pursue her career with the SS.
During the conversation in Vienna, Schneider establishes that from the women's camp at Ravensbruck, her mother had moved to Auschwitz-Birkenau where she was in charge of a "correction" unit where brutal torture was administered. She was also involved with gas chambers and lethal injections. She was close to the highest echelons of Nazi power and knew all the details of Nazi atrocities, which she considered, and still considers, to be legitimate. Her mother continues to regard her former prisoners as the sub-human inferiors predicated by Nazi ideology. Without self-pity, Helga Schneider skillfully interweaves her family history into the interview with her mother, describing her difficult upbringing and the raising of her own child against the background of the reality of her mother's past.

"From the Hardcover edition.

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Military
- History | Holocaust
- Biography & Autobiography | Women
Dewey: B
Physical Information: 0.53" H x 5.08" W x 7.06" (0.32 lbs) 192 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Unforgettable and deeply arresting, "Let Me Go" is a haunting memoir of World War II that wont let you go until youve finished reading the last page ("The Washington Post Book World"). In 1941, in Berlin, Helga Schneiders mother abandoned her along with her father and younger brother. "Let Me Go" recounts Helgas final meeting with her ailing mother in a Vienna nursing home some sixty years after World War II, in which Helga confronts a nightmare: her mothers lack of repentance about her past as a Nazi SS guard at concentration camps, including Auschwitz, where she was responsible for untold acts of torture. With spellbinding detail, Schneider recalls their conversation, evoking her own struggle between a daughters sense of obligation and the inescapable horror of her mothers deeds.