First published at 02:03 UTC on March 4th, 2022.
More nonsense coming our way to tug at the heart strings of the dumb goys and gullible Jews. Later, he told The Guardian, “The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is deliberately subtitled A Fable, a work of fiction with a moral at the center . . . By relati…
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More nonsense coming our way to tug at the heart strings of the dumb goys and gullible Jews. Later, he told The Guardian, “The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas is deliberately subtitled A Fable, a work of fiction with a moral at the center . . . By relating to my central characters, by caring about them and wanting no harm to come to them, the young reader can learn empathy and kindness.”
(Children were not issued striped camp uniforms unless for staging for pictures or possibly warm clothing over their regular clothes.)
https://lithub.com/a-the-boy-in-the-striped-pyjamas-sequel-will-be-published-this-year-its-controversial/#:~:text=John%20Boyne%2C%20writer%20of%20The,with%2014%20deals%20already%20completed.
John Boyne, writer of The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, is releasing a sequel to the novel on September 15, 2022. All The Broken Places will be published by Doubleday and Penguin Random House in the U.S., Transworld in the U.K., and then receive a global release with 14 deals already completed. The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas told the story of Bruno, the nine-year-old son of a senior SS officer at Auschwitz, who develops an unlikely friendship with Shmuel, an imprisoned Jewish boy; in All The Broken Places, Bruno’s older sister Gretel—now ninety-one years old—looks back on a life “scarred by guilt and grief.”
HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR TESTIMONY: “Most of the memoirs and reports of Holocaust survivors are full of preposterous verbosity, graphomanic exaggeration, dramatic effects, overestimated self-inflation, dilettante philosophizing, would-be lyricism, unchecked rumors, bias, partisan attacks…” –Samuel Gringauz, “Jewish Social Studies” (New York), January 1950, Vol. 12, p6.
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