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Lorsque l'armée hitlérienne envahit la Pologne, Wladyslaw Szpilman est un jeune pianiste. Il vit avec ses parents et ses frères et soeurs à Varsovie et travaille pour Radio Pologne. La chute de la ville entre les mains allemandes fait basculer leur destin. Les portes du ghetto vont bientôt se refermer sur eux, et sur un demi-million de Juifs polonais, condamnés à l'esclavage, aux privations et à la mort.
Szpilman raconte la vie quotidienne, qui continue jusqu'en 1942, les trahisons et les inégalités au sein de la communauté juive enfermée, puis les déportations méthodiques, la perte de sa famille, et la révolte du ghetto, sursaut d'une poignée de désespérés face à une armée allemande suréquipée. Il livre ici le récit halluciné d'une lutte pour la survie. --Maya Kandel
316 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1946
"Evil and brutality lurk in the human heart. If they are allowed to develop freely, they flourish, putting out dreadful offshoots...."
"Our entire nation will have to pay for all these wrongs and this unhappiness, all the crimes we have committed. Many innocent people must be sacrificed before the blood-guilt we've incurred can be wiped out. That's an inexorable law in small and large things alike."

“Tomorrow I must begin a new life. How could I do it, with nothing but death behind me? What vital energy could I draw from death?”
“One thing strikes me; Szpilman’s emotional register seems to include no desire for revenge. We once had a conversation in Warsaw; he had toured the world as a pianist and was now sitting, exhausted, at his old grand piano, which needed tuning. He made an almost childish remark, half ironically but half in deadly earnest. “When I was young man I studied in music for two years in Berlin. I just can’t make Germans out…they were so extremely musical!”

“It is hard to believe all this, and I try not to, not so much of anxiety for the future of our nation, which will have to pay for these monstrous things someday – but because I can’t believe Hitler wants such things and there are Germans who will give such order. If it so, there can only explain: they’re sick, abnormal or mad.”

