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The Sisterhood of Ravensbrück
How an Intrepid Band of Frenchwomen Resisted the Nazis in Hitler's All-Female Concentration Camp
“At once heartbreaking and beautifully told, this is a masterwork of nonfiction, a must-read for anyone who wants more of the incredible true story behind Lilac Girls.”—Martha Hall Kelly, author of Lilac Girls
ONE OF THE TOP TEN BOOKS OF JUNE—The Washington Post and Los Angeles Times
Decades after the end of World War II, the name Ravensbrück still evokes horror for those with knowledge of this infamous all-women’s concentration camp, better known since it became the setting of Martha Hall Kelly’s bestselling novel, Lilac Girls. Particularly shocking were the medical experiments performed on some of the inmates. Ravensbrück was atypical in other ways as well, not just as the only all-female German concentration camp, but because 80 percent of its inmates were political prisoners, among them a tight-knit group of women who had been active in the French Resistance.
Already well-practiced in sabotaging the Nazis in occupied France, these women joined forces to defy their German captors and keep one another alive. The sisterhood’s members, amid unimaginable terror and brutality, subverted Germany’s war effort by refusing to do assigned work. They risked death for any infraction, but that did not stop them from defying their SS tormentors at every turn—even staging a satirical musical revue about the horrors of the camp.
After the war, when many in France wanted to focus only on the future, the women from Ravensbrück refused to allow their achievements, needs, and sacrifices to be erased. They banded together once more, first to support one another in healing their bodies and minds and then to continue their crusade for freedom and justice—an effort that would have repercussions for their country and the world into the twenty-first century.
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Release date
June 3, 2025 -
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- ISBN: 9780593732311
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- ISBN: 9780593732311
- File size: 12153 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
April 1, 2025
Agents of the French Resistance find life-lasting, soul-saving, history-changing friendships in an all-female concentration camp. Germaine Tillion, Anise Girard, Genevi�ve de Gaulle, Jacqueline d'Alincourt, and scores of their friends and collaborators were arrested and imprisoned in the early 1940s for participating in underground resistance efforts following the Vichy government's surrender to Nazi Germany. Rounding out a trilogy of sorts (including the bestsellerMadame Fourcade's Secret War) about oft-overlooked French heroines of World War II, Olson follows each of her four primary subjects from backgrounds etched with both privilege and patriarchy into resistance operations and then to the dehumanizing barracks of Ravensbr�ck. Olson chronicles their months clinging precariously to life in wretched conditions with graphic, sometimes sickening, detail, with intensifying stories of day-to-day horrors and descriptions of particular acts of brutality perpetrated by guards and medical staff. But beyond documenting such cruelty, Olson offers a deeper, even uplifting, story about the power of the female prisoners' bond, not just to abet their survival but to preserve and strengthen their commitment to justice. As the war drew to a close and SS administrators became more desperate, the tightknit group of defiant and determined women resisted work, led "audacious" operations to protect the most vulnerable among them, recorded the atrocities they witnessed, and even created art. These activities laid the groundwork for the efforts they spearheaded upon their liberation and repatriation. Despite the lack of a hero's welcome, the former prisoners sought justice for their captors and medical care and compensation for themselves and their fellow inmates. The author's portrayal of the women's postwar work, relationships, and notoriety inspires even greater awe at their widespread, ongoing positive impact. Both devastating and galvanizing, an account of how the best of humanity can rise to oppose the very worst.COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
April 18, 2025
Olson's (Empress of the Nile: The Daredevil Archaeologist Who Saved Egypt's Ancient Temples from Destruction) latest book focuses on the lives of four French women Resistance fighters who were arrested and sent to Ravensbr�ck, Germany's largest concentration camp for women. Their lives are traced from before the war to their wartime activities as French Resistance fighters and their daily lives in Ravensbr�ck, recounting what they witnessed, how they coped, and the ways in which they continued to rebel. At Ravensbr�ck, they were housed with other Resistance fighters, and here Olson focuses on how her subjects were stood up to their Nazi captors by protecting others, by creating art that documented the daily horrors of the camp, and by refusing to do forced labor. After the war and being freed from Ravensbr�ck, the women continued their activism to ensure they and others were given restitution for their imprisonment, while also combating racism and antisemitism in France. Using primary sources, including conversations with the women, and original artwork from one of them, Olson's book celebrates the lives of a brave band of women who became a force in an unbearably cruel time and place. VERDICT Best suited for readers who enjoy history, predominantly World War II accounts, and gender studies.--Jacqueline Parascandola
Copyright 2025 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
Starred review from May 1, 2025
Historian Olson (Empress of the Nile, 2023) takes a piercing look at the Ravensbr�ck concentration camp through the experiences of four female French Resistance fighters imprisoned there: anthropologist Germaine Tillion, young widow Jacqueline d'Alincourt, fiery Anise Girard, and passionate Genevi�ve de Gaulle (niece of Charles de Gaulle). Upon being deported to the remote German camp, they faced brutal beatings at the hands of sadistic Nazis, inhumane work conditions, and filthy and overcrowded barracks where disease and infection ran rampant. Even more horrifying, they met a coterie of Polish prisoners, known as the "rabbits," who were being subjected to gruesome experiments. The bonds the women formed not only allowed them to survive these atrocities (giving them chances to bolster and even save each other time and again) but also to endure in the decades that followed. The women banded together to fight for justice against their Nazi tormentors, support other survivors, and help the Polish women still suffering from the brutal experiments they were subjected to receive treatments and settlements when the West German government very much wanted to ignore them, and the Allies were eager to move on. Olson's crisp, visceral prose makes this moving, heartwrenching, and powerful testament to the power of chosen sisterhood and found family a true standout.COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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- English
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