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The Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz: A Story of Survival

The Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz: A Story of Survival

by Anne Sebba

St. Martin's Press ·2025 ·400 pages
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About This Book

Moving and powerful, this is a vivid portrait of the women who came together to form an orchestra in order to survive the horrors of Auschwitz. New York Times bestselling author of Les Parisiennes and That Woman: The Life of Wallis Simpson now examines how a disparate band of young girls struggled to overcome differences and little musical knowledge to please the often-sadistic Nazi overseers. In 1943, German SS officers in charge of Auschwitz-Birkenau ordered that an orchestra be formed among the female prisoners. Almost fifty women and girls from eleven nations were drafted into a band that would play in all weathers marching music to other inmates, forced laborers who left each morning and returned, exhausted and often broken, at the end of the day. While still living amid the harshest of circumstances, with little more than a bowl of soup to eat, they were also made to give weekly concerts for Nazi officers, and individual members were sometimes summoned to give solo performances. For almost all of the musicians chosen to take part, being in the orchestra saved their lives. But at what cost? What role could music play in a death camp? What was the effect on those women who owed their survival to their participation in a Nazi propaganda project? And how did it feel to be forced to provide solace to the perpetrators of a genocide that claimed the lives of their family and friends? In The Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz, award-winning historian Anne Sebba traces these tangled questions of deep moral complexity with sensitivity and care. From Alma Rosé, the orchestra's main conductor, niece of Gustav Mahler and a formidable pre-war celebrity violinist, to Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, its teenage cellist and last surviving member, Sebba draws on meticulous archival research and exclusive first-hand accounts to tell the full and astonishing story of the orchestra, its members, and the response of other prisoners for the first time.


Reviews

"The author has done these women proud."

Caroline Moorehead· Times Literary Supplement Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Nuanced and unsettling ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Running through this fine book is Sebba's empathy for the impossible moral choices presented to these young women."

Kathryn Hughes· The Guardian Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Sebba's command of detail is superb."

Simon Heffer· The Telegraph (UK) Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Yet for all her restraint and good intent, her book propagates a frustrating distortion of the history ..."

Makana Eyre· The New Republic Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

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