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The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman [Hardcover]

Andrzej Szczypiorski
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 204 pages
  • Publisher: Grove Pr; 1 edition (Feb 1990)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0802111408
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802111401
  • Product Dimensions: 21.1 x 14.2 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,440,780 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Andrzej Szczypiorski
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Product Description

Product Description

Beautiful Irma Seidenman has three attributes that keep her out of the Warsaw ghetto: blonde hair, blue eyes and excellent forged papers. But one day an informer denounces her to the Gestapo, and in the 36 hours following her arrest, unlikely links are forged between a chain of disparate people. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Dennis
Format:Paperback
This book is beautifully simple in its style, yet this does not take away from the story in any way at all. It gives a unique insight into the lives of so many characters in Warsaw during German occupation. Very personal, very ordinary, yet at the same time it does not ignore the bigger picture of telling the story of the city as a whole. It does not focus on the protagonist alone, as the title might suggest. While she is the centre of attention in parts of the story, the focus is very often on those around her, and can branch off in a tangent to tell the story of one of her neighbours, or to tell of the fate of a young Jewish man. There are also some interesting jumps forward to the future of some characters who survive the war, only to become citizens on the new communist Poland. A very interesting read for anyone with an interest in the personal histories of WWII.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Read this book 7 Mar 2011
Format:Hardcover
Beautifully written. Each chapter introduces a different aspect of the same story. We hear the characters' internal contemplation on existence, death and time making it an intensely personalised view of Warsaw in 1940s. The narrative moves omnipotently forward and backward through time, making comparisons between this story and later 20th century tragedies leaning the book a real sense of lose and poignancy.
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Amazon.com:  10 reviews
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful
Beautiful, poignant book 7 Jun 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I bought two copies of this book years ago so I could share it with a good friend and have someone to talk to about this wonderful, disturbing story. Sad to say, she's yet to read it. I've read it three times over the years and am moved and haunted still by the realism of the characters and their struggles for dignity and life. One day, I'll meet someone else who has read this book, and over a long cafe break, we'll discuss the imagery, the painful courage of the protagonists, and the latter day realities the Holocaust has left behind . . . . .
23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
A poignant account of wartime as experienced by the innocent 19 Dec 1997
By jdoherty@student.flint.umich.edu - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The American perception of life during World War Two is cast in images of women working, doing jobs traditionally reserved for men, of busy factories, constantly turning out munitions of war, ration books, victory gardens, and pictures of heroic looking young men in uniform occupying places of honor on walls, mantelpieces, and end tables all over America. The reality and horror of war was far away - not so for Mrs. Irma Seidenman.

Andrzej Szczypiorski's The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman is a novel set in Nazi-occupied Poland during WW II. Born in Warsaw in 1924, Mr. Szczypiorski fought in the Polish Resistance, took part in the Warsaw uprising in 1944, and served time in a German concentration camp. Drawing on his wartime experience, Szczypiorski assembles a montage of characters struggling for survival in wartime Warsaw, cleverly knitting their experiences within the lives of his main characters, Pawelek Kry ski and Irma Seidenman.

Mrs. Seidenman had been a neighbor of the Kry skis before the war. A beautiful Nordic looking woman, Irma has been able to elude the Nazis, dodging the fate of the rest of Warsaw's Jewish community. Irma possesses two crucial attributes, blue eyes and blonde hair, that have, with the help of forged papers, established her as Mrs. Maria Magdalena Grotomska, the widow of a Polish Army officer. With the help of Pawelek, who is obviously in love with her, she has been able to blend in with the rest of the Polish population, until one fateful day, when she rounds the corner of a Warsaw building and comes face to face with Bronek Blutman. Blutman is a Nazi toady, a nefarious Jew who is surviving by fingering Warsaw Jews who have escaped the Nazi net.

Using the narration of Mrs. Seidenman's rescue, Szczypiorski, interjects the lives of a collage of Warsaw's inhabitants caught up in the terror of the Nazi occupation. His prose successfully instills the sense of despair felt by Pawelek's friend Henio as he decides to return to the ghetto. It is through Szczypiorski's eloquence, we experience the dignity of judge Kujawski and the conniving tactics of Lolo, we pity the Jewish lawyer Fichtelbaum and hate the consciencelessness of the Gestapo officer Stuckler.

Szczypiorski's novel exposes the American audience to a harsher reality of the War. His vignettes draw a poignant picture of individual responses to the Nazi terror in an easily readable style that transports the reader into the lives of his characters. The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman is an enlightening account of the War experience viewed from the perspectives of the many innocents trapped in its inhumanity.

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
A Not So Simple Tale 9 Mar 2003
By Dana - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman is one of the most beautifully written novels I have ever read. The author deftly weaves together several people's lives which converge during the same time period. There are no distilled characterizations of heroes or demons; rather, fairly ordinary and yet complex people who are trying to figure out how to live and survive in Nazi occupied Warsaw. To further exemplify how ordinary the characters are, Szczypiorski projects each person into their future to let the reader know what will become of him or her. This can be an artifical plot device but in this case, it is highely effecting. Moreover, it does not take the reader so much out of the present, rather it helps one to better undertand the complexity of each character--no matter how "simple" he or she may seem. This is a very full reading experience. It is thought provoking, affect laden and a really well told story. I highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in the Holocaust and/or Poland.
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