Media Reviews
Powerfully written. A book that deals with paradoxes, dilemmas, and insolvables... in an unusual, highly affecting narrative of the World War II experience of Jews but also of non-Jews outside the Nazi concentration and death camps. -Emily Miller Budick, author of The Subject of Holocaust Fiction This book takes a unique approach to a World War II memoir, combining not only the stories of a father and son, but both men's years apart writing about the subject...The dual perspectives are invaluable, and create a fresh approach to an important story. -Foreword Reviews Schrag combines his father's narrative with judicious research and documentary reference to insure clarity and historical accuracy; he also inserts parts of his own memoir, which he wrote before discovering his father's manuscript... 'Through the fog of war,' Peter Schrag observes, 'little can be seen very clearly.' To their great credit, these father-son memoirs help us see through this very dense and sinister fog. -Jewish Book World With his book, Peter Schrag has vividly added the emotional dimension of his personal experience to the tragic events endured by our families during WWII. -Marcel Bervoets, author of La Liste de Saint-Cyprien The Schrags' captivating story of emigration, statelessness and internment, which is so shrewdly voiced and dialogued by father and son, transcends the margins of intimate memoires and becomes a surrealistic, yet real, collective testimony of the tragic farce (Ionesco) forcedly played by millions of undesirables on the absurd theater's European stage. -Pnina Rosenberg, author of L'art des indesirables: l'art visuel dans les camps francais When Europe Was a Prison Camp is a brilliant, eloquent, and compelling intergenerational memoir about the escape from Belgium of the Schrags, an assimilated bourgeois German family leading the good life, who overnight became Jews (again) when the shooting started in WWII. Civic order was fractured as these 'heroes without courage' endured the grossest inhumanities. A timely reminder that life for Jews in the Diaspora is inevitably contingent and perilous. -Mark G. Yudof, President Emeritus, University of California A powerful account of the forced exile and internment by Belgium and France of refugees from Nazi Germany. Otto Schrag's story brings to light the life-and-death choices these refugees had to face and their dauntless survival strategies. His son, Peter, places his own memories in perspective and supplements the work with a rigorous commentary, revealing the sensitive balance between history and memory, knowledge and emotion. -Anne Grynberg, University Professor, l'Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales, Paris, and author of Les Camps de la honte: les internes juifs des camps francais 1939-1944 When Europe Was a Prison Camp is a skillfully interlaced narrative that generates empathy and admiration for the people in these various episodes, especially women, who as Peter emphasizes, risked so much to stay alive and keep their families together. It is a greatly entertaining but equally insightful and important read for anyone interested in the history of World War II, the Holocaust, and Jewish history. In its combined format, it is a worthy read and invitation for further scholarly and pedagogical use. -H-Net Reviews When Europe Was a Prison Camp is a skillfully interlaced narrative that generates empathy and admiration for the people in these various episodes, especially women, who as Peter emphasizes, risked so much to stay alive and keep their families together. It is a greatly entertaining but equally insightful and important read for anyone interested in the history of World War II, the Holocaust, and Jewish history. -H-Net