05 June 2022

Excellent.

An excellent book ...


Accompanying the frontispiece ...
While it lasted, Block 31 housed up to five hundred children together with several prisoners appointed “counselors,” and in spite of the severe surveillance it possessed, against all expectations, a clandestine children’s library. The library was minuscule; it consisted of eight books, which included H.G. Wells’s A Short History of the World, a Russian school textbook and an analytical geometry text. Once or twice an inmate from another camp managed to smuggle in a new book, so that the number of holdings rose to nine or ten. At the end of each day, the books, together with other valuables such as medicines and bits of food, would be entrusted to one of the older girls, whose responsibility it was to hide them in a different place every night.

From The Library at Night by Alberto Manguel
Thank you, Nora.

No comments:

Post a Comment