The watchmaker's daughter : the true story of World War II heroine Corrie Ten Boom / Larry Loftis.
Publisher: New York : William Morrow, 2023Description: x, 370 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:- 9780063234581
- 940.53/18092 B 23/eng/20230202
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
900 - 999 | Hanover Public Library Shelves | BIOG 940.5318 LOFT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31906001241430 |
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BIOG 940.5318 HAHN The Nazi officer's wife : how one Jewish woman survived the Holocaust / | BIOG 940.5318 LEDE Kiss the red stairs : the Holocaust, once removed / | BIOG 940.5318 LEWK The survivor : | BIOG 940.5318 LOFT The watchmaker's daughter : the true story of World War II heroine Corrie Ten Boom / | BIOG 940.5318 NELS Suzanne's children : a daring rescue in Nazi Paris / | BIOG 940.5318 PICK My friend Anne Frank : the inspiring and heartbreaking true story of best friends torn apart and reunited against all odds / | BIOG 940.5318 SMAR The boy in the woods / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-354) and index.
Prologue -- The watchmakers -- Hilter youth -- Persecution -- Razzias -- Diving under -- The angels' den -- The babies -- Terror -- Resistance -- The chief -- The mission -- Six hundred guilders -- Trapped -- Privileged -- Prison -- Lieutenant Rahms -- Bones -- Mrs. Hendriks -- Summary justice -- Ravensbruck -- Murder -- The skeleton -- The list -- Edema -- Deja vu -- The factory -- Loving the enemy -- Epilogue -- The rest of the story.
The ten Booms, who had recently celebrated the one-hundred-year anniversary of their Haarlem watch shop, lived a quiet life. That change in 1940 when the Nazis occupied the Netherlands and Jewish citizens began to disappear. Corrie and her family, devout Christians, joined the Dutch Resistance and built a secret room in their house to hide Jews and refugees. The Gestapo applied unrelenting pressure on Haarlem, continually raiding homes to snatch Jews and Resistance members. When Corrie and her family were ultimately arrested in the winter of 1944, they faced interrogation, beatings, and possible execution. Before long, she and her sister Betsie were sent to the notorious Ravensbruck camp. In the face of the horrors around her, Corrie found solace in her faith, and she ministered to other prisoners, providing comfort and hope. Miraculously, she survived, though by the time she returned home, she had lost many loved ones, including her father and Betsie. For Corrie, though, her journey was only beginning. Eschewing bitterness and embracing forgiveness, she provided free housing to hundreds of survivors who had been wounded by war, physically or emotionally. For the rest of her life, she traveled the globe as an evangelist, sharing her story of faith, hope, and love at churches, clubs, and prisons-even a leper colony. --
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