cover image Claiming My Place: A True Story of Defiance, Deception and Coming of Age in the Shadow of the Holocaust

Claiming My Place: A True Story of Defiance, Deception and Coming of Age in the Shadow of the Holocaust

Planaria Price, with Helen Reichmann West. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $17.99 (272p) ISBN 978-0-374-30529-1

Price’s rendering of West’s mother’s early life reads like suspenseful historical fiction, telling a rarely heard side of the Jewish experience during WWII. Barbara Reichmann, born Sura Gitla “Gucia” Gomolinska in 1916, described to Rice, in sensory detail, her prewar Jewish childhood in a town in central Poland, followed by the tense war years living in Poland, Germany, and Switzerland as a Polish-Catholic girl named Basia. Reichman’s education, fluency in Polish, and fair hair and coloring allowed her to pass as a non-Jew while many of her friends and family suffered through or died during the Holocaust. Writing from an engrossing first-person perspective, Price makes Gucia/Basia a fully dimensional character, tracing her development from taking her heritage and faith for granted to becoming a leader in the youth Zionist movement at age 13. She left the organization at 18, realized that she might survive the war by hiding her identity. Family, friendships, and romance give poignancy to this unique coming-of-age story, which is further enhanced by maps, photos, a glossary, and an afterword. Ages 12–up. (Mar.)