The World has Caught Fire

The World has Caught Fire

One Jewish Family's Attempt to Survive Nazi Poland

From Auschwitz’s infamous Block 25 to a daring escape from collapsing Nazi Germany, this gripping true story follows one Jewish teenager’s impossible mission to save her younger sister during the Holocaust.

About the Book

Dora Bursztajn was only 13 years old when the Nazis invaded Poland and set the world she knew ablaze. Forced into the Brzeziny Ghetto alongside her family, Dora was forced to grow up and shoulder a burden no child should bear: keeping her younger sister alive. Bound by love and by her mother’s final plea to “take care of your sister,” Dora navigates some of the Holocaust’s deadliest landscapes, including the Łódź Ghetto, Block 25 at Auschwitz, known by prisoners as the “waiting room of the gas chambers,” Berlin during its final bombardment, and a little-known, last-ditch escape effort known as the White Buses.

Drawing on survivor testimony, archival research, and Holocaust scholarship, The World Has Caught Fire is both a gripping true story and a powerful reckoning with how the Holocaust is remembered today. Through the haunting story of one Jewish family, it challenges readers to confront not only how people survived, but also how millions perished and what is lost when their stories are softened, simplified, or forgotten.

Details
Author: Leah Grisham, PhD
Series: Holocaust Survivor True Stories
Genre: Holocaust
Tags: Audio rights available, Foreign Rights Available, Soon to be released
ISBN: 9789493541177
List Price: $19,95
eBook Price: $6,99
Leah Grisham, PhD

Leah Grisham is a freelance writer whose work focuses on Judaism, feminism, and literature. She received her PhD in English from George Washington University in 2020, where her work focused on Victorian novels that resist patriarchal social norms. Her first book, an academic monograph titled Heroic Disobedience: The Forced Marriage Plot and the British Novel, 1747–1880, was published in 2023.

The World Has Caught Fire grew out of her longstanding interest in Holocaust memory, especially the stories that get forgotten. This is her first work of narrative nonfiction. She lives in Ohio with her husband and two young children. Her writing can also be found in magazines like Kveller, Lilith, and on her blog leahshewrote.com.

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