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A Train in Winter

A Train in Winter

A Story of Resistance, Friendship and Survival in Auschwitz

Summary


A moving and extraordinary book about courage and survival, friendship and endurance – a portrait of ordinary women who faced the horror of the holocaust together.

On an icy morning in Paris in January 1943, a group of 230 French women resisters were rounded up from the Gestapo detention camps and sent on a train to Auschwitz – the only train, in the four years of German occupation, to take women of the resistance to a death camp. Of the group, only 49 survivors would return to France.

Here is the story of these women – told for the first time. A Train in Winter is a portrait of ordinary people, of their bravery and endurance, and of the friendships that kept so many of them alive.

‘A story of stunning courage, generosity and hope’ Mail on Sunday

‘Serious and heartfelt...profound’
Sunday Times

Reviews

  • This serious and heartfelt book does deliver on its promise of a tale of how female friendship "can make the difference between living and dying"... Profound
    Brian Schofield, Sunday Times

About the author

Caroline Moorehead

Caroline Moorehead is a bestselling and prizewinner author, and the biographer of Bertrand Russell, Freya Stark, Iris Origo, Madame de la Tour du Pin and Martha Gellhorn. Her recent books - a quartet focussed on resistance to dictatorship, particularly in Italy - were shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize, the Orwell Prize and the Costa Biography Award. She lives in London.
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