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Original Title: The Cage
ISBN: 068981321X (ISBN13: 9780689813214)
Edition Language: English
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The Cage Paperback | Pages: 264 pages
Rating: 4.08 | 5624 Users | 360 Reviews

Relation Supposing Books The Cage


As long as there is life, there is hope

After Mama is taken away by the Nazis, Riva and her younger brothers cling to their mother's brave words to help them endure life in the Lodz ghetto. Then the family is rounded up, deported to Auschwitz, and separated. Now Riva is alone.

At Auschwitz, and later in the work camps at Mittlesteine and Grafenort, Riva vows to live, and to hope - for Mama, for her brothers, for the millions of other victims of the nightmare of the Holocaust. And through determination and courage, and unexpected small acts of kindness, she does live - to write the unforgettable memoir that is a testament to the strength of the human spirit.

Details About Books The Cage

Title:The Cage
Author:Ruth Minsky Sender
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 264 pages
Published:August 1st 1997 by Simon Pulse (first published 1986)
Categories:World War II. Holocaust. Nonfiction. History. Autobiography. Memoir. War

Rating About Books The Cage
Ratings: 4.08 From 5624 Users | 360 Reviews

Write-Up About Books The Cage
I really like this book, because it makes me feel as if I am there. It gets intense at some parts of the stories. One of the examples is how Riva lost her mom and brother. The author expresses her feelings in a new better way than other Holocaust authors write. This is because, when other Holocaust books are mostly about hiding, this book talks more about labor camps. I think that Sender made me to realize how gruesome the Holocaust was and how lucky I am to be alive. The Holocaust was one of

This book is about a young girl who loses her mother in a holocaust raid. She later gets separated from her younger siblings that she was responsible for ever since her mother was taken. Riva developed an infection in her hand from working in he concentration camp. She is treated by the kindness of the many officers of the concentration camp, even the commandant. Riva is freed from the concentration camp, she has a wonderful daughter that always asks her about her grandparents, Rivas parents.

I rarely have never read a Holocaust book, and this is my first. I hesitated to read this book, because I would not want to have the same nightmares as the story would have. But with my homework being in my father's car, and 2 hours to spare, I begin reading the first chapter, which I must say, is absolutely enticing. Although I cannot say I absolutely love the ending, I do love the story, and the characters, and- and... Oh my, the tears are coming out again. It makes me horribly sad to just

This book is about a thirteen year old girl who survived from the Holocaust. The girl was named Riva, and the three children. This book was a very good book, which it brought the sadness of the concentration camps. The book was getting fast when it did happened in real life. On the September 10th, 1942, which their mother had taken out of the ghetto during a Nazi raid. This book was quickly, which there were some action, which the officers would kill some Jewish, put in the gas chambers, some

Mom Mondays is a bi weekly segment here on a ravenclaw library. Click here to learn more details about this segment and how you can do this with your family! note: My mom knows that the Holocaust is one of my favorite events to study and one of my first loves of history. (Thank Danielle Steels book, Echoes, for that.) Hence why Mom picks up Holocaust books for me whenever she can. She also does this really awesome thing (that she should totally keep doing because I really like it!) where if she

" When there is life, there is hope" is the quote that the teenage girl received from her mother before the nazis separated her from her mother and her brother, Riva is alone sent her to concentration camp. Life has just gone bad for the poor girl, not only is she alone and scared but she is sick. Going through many hospitals looking for help but only one caring hospital who subsided the fact that she was Jewish to keep her alive, all other hospitals not willing to help do to her Jewish

The Lodz Ghetto: Review of The Cage by Ruth Minsky In her Holocaust memoir, The Cage (Simon & Schuster, 1997), Ruth Minsky Sender compares the Lodz ghetto not to imprisonment of human beings, but to a cage that animals are trapped in. The metaphor is powerful and apt. A medium sized city in Poland, Lodz had a relatively large Jewish population. Out of the citys nearly 700,000 occupants, about a quarter of million were Jews. The Germans established the Lodz Ghetto in February, 1940. They

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