Member Reviews
Jack Hersch is the son of a Jewish survivor of Mathausen, David Hersch.
On June 1944, David , an athletic, handsome , and healthy 160 lb 18 year old, enters KZ Mauthausen for the first time. KZ Mauthausen is one of the harshest, cruelest labor camps in the entire Third Reich. To end up here is more or less a death sentence. Day after day, however, David survives.
10 months later, a starving, sick, and deathly weak David, weighing only 80 lbs is forced onto a "Death March" to KZ Gunskirchen, which is 34 miles away. However, David never makes it there. Once again beating all odds, David escapes. Not once, but twice. It is truly a miracle.
Jack grew up listening to his father's stories about his time at Mauthausen and his escape. But it isnt until Jack comes across his fathers photo on the Mathausen Concentration Camp Memorial website that he realizes how unusual and unique his story truly is.
Realizing there is a lot more to his fathers story, Jack embarks on a journey to uncover his fathers past and to, hopefully , find answers to all of his questions. With David no longer alive, it will not be an easy task. He books a ticket to the place where it all started, Mauthausen.
Death March Escape is tragically inspiring, reminding us of how much strength a single person can have when faced with the unimaginable, surviving when all odds are stacked against them. This book is also a reminder to be kind, every single. day. To reach out and help those around you when you can. To not take anything for granted and cherish every moment we have.
Thank you Netgalley, for giving me a copy.
The author is the son of a Jew survivor of the concentration camp. The survivor is his father who escaped twice from the Nazis, which is very rare.
I really enjoyed the book; however, I was seeking for specific details. The author tells the story of father and retraces his father's story to walk where his father walked. Throughout the reading, I can feel how much he honors his father.
What I got out of the book was how honorable and brave his father was in enduring the suffering that fell upon him.
I do read mostly fiction, but from time to time I would touch a non fiction story especially from WWII period. This was a good yet bittersweet read. The author portraits the events as they were, and flawlessly. I read this book thinking how brave the characters were, how courageous and smart they had to be to survive in those terrible times when humanity did not matter.
This book is one of these reads that makes you reflect and think of life after reading it.
A remarkable story and like so many of this era so sad it happened but we must be vigilant so it doesn't happen again.
I truly enjoyed this book ~
A true and incredible story about the struggle to survive during the Holocaust. Amazing how the human mind and body can survive such a journey and tale.
This was a story of a son following in his father's footsteps. He did his best to follow the same paths his father followed and to visit all the places he hid.
The father has an amazing story of having escaped two Nazi death marches. At the time of rescue he was 80 pounds and suffering from several terrible ailments. The fact that he lived to tell his son the story is a miracle.
I appreciate the son sharing his story. The story was hard to read as it was broken into sections skipping between father, son, and army movements. I feel the story would have flowed better by seperating it into sections.
In DEATH MARCH ESCAPE, JACK J HERSCH honours his father by telling the story of his incarceration in Mauthausen and Gusen 1 and 2 concentration camps and his escape from the death march, not once but twice.
His father was a true survivor who had a strong faith in God and a positive outlook on life.
We see how the author tells the stories his father told them each year at the Seder meal, but wishes he had asked more questions and that he had gone with him in 1997 when he visited the camps and the people who hid him in the attic when he escaped from the second death march.
When the author is told that his father is the only person to have escaped twice from the death march, he goes to Austria to see the places for himself.
It is an emotional and well told story. As the author does his research and remembers what his father told him, it becomes a time of self examination for him, as he thinks of his father's courage and strong will and feels that he could never survive what his father did. It is a heart wrenching story as we hear of the lengths to which the Nazis went to annihilate the Jews (and other groups of people who they saw as inferior).
Throughout the narrative the author tells us about the progress of the Allies during that last year of the Second World War.
I was given a free copy of the book by NetGalley from Frontline Books. The opinions in this review are completely my own.
I found this book to be an informative and interesting read. I enjoyed reading the details of this survivor's story and noted it was both well written and edited. The flow and narrative were well thought out and appropriate.
I received a complimentary copy of this book from NetGalley and the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
This is a heart wrenching tale of an eighteen year old Romanian Jewish boy who not only survived the horrors of one of the Third Reich's most horrific concentration camps, but also escaped from the infamous death marches, not just once, but twice ! Remarkably, with death ever-present, he still retained an incredibly upbeat outlook on life and lightened the burden of those around him. In his "American Dream" life after the war, he lovingly passed on his experiences and his outlook on life to his oldest son Jack, who he affectionately referred to as Jeckeleh. The book follows two paths: the father's battle to survive in the camps, and his son Jack's struggle to come to terms with his father's death and the past he thought he understood. As Jack travels through Europe to retrace his father's odyssey, he ponders why he did not ask more questions while his father was still alive and also whether he can ever be "the son that his father deserves". As the book continues, we come to understand both the courage of the father and the growing awareness of the son. In sharing this inspiring legacy with us, Jack has left an enduring memorial of his father's remarkable life and has dramatically demonstrated that he is "the son that his father deserves".
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Death March Escape: The Remarkable Story of a Man Who Twice Escaped the Nazi Holocaust by Jack J Hersch is a biography of Dave Hersch, the author’s father. This is Mr. Hersch’s first non-fiction book.
After his father passed away, the author realized what many other children of Holocaust survivors found out – they didn’t ask enough questions, or pried for more information. Frankly, it’s not his fault the during the book he kicks himself for it, from personal experience though I found out the Holocaust survivors are not eager to talk about their experiences, and from some reason their children don’t want to know (the grandchildren, however, do).
In Death March Escape: The Remarkable Story of a Man Who Twice Escaped the Nazi Holocaust by Jack J Hersch the author retraces his father’s footsteps in Europe. Dave Hersch is the only person known to have escaped and survived two death marches.
Mr. Hersch’s story is certainly an amazing one, and certainly deserved its own book (as do many other survivors, and I’m sure many who didn’t survive as well). I fail to comprehend how Dave Hersch survived a year in Mauthausen Concentration Camp, a place which was built specifically as a slave / murder machine.
Dave Hersch told his story of escape to his children every Passover, a holiday celebrating an exodus and survival. As the author found out, his memory sometimes betrayed him and he might have chosen only to tell specific parts – but at least his story was told, passed on to his children and now is here for posterity.
One of the passages that stuck with me was that Dave Hersch told the author that before going to Mauthausen, he was an Auschwitz for 2-3 weeks. When the author investigated further he found that it was actually 2-3 days. How horrible must be a place like that, where every hour seems like a day?
The chapters navigate between telling the experience of Dave Hersch, a short section telling the reader about the war (focusing on Patton’s 3rd Army which liberated Mauthausen), and a chapter of the author’s search, as well as his reflections on what he found out. A remarkable survival story, with a deep, personal narration.
As Jack fills in the gaps of his fathers story, he starts to understand why his father would always tell him, “You should never know.” He also begins to understand why his father used such phrases as ‘everything is alright’, ‘no big deal’, and ‘not so terrible’.
Jack puts so much emotion in his writing that I can feel his anger, the hurt and shock as he attempts to literally follow his fathers footsteps. I can also follow along with him on his journey on Google maps. This was an experience that was new to me in reading books on the Holocaust.
If you love to read Holocaust books, I would suggest this one. It’s not only about a mans struggle to survive, but it also holds a lot of history in it’s pages.
I have read a few Holocaust stories, and they are always emotional. This one is not an exception.
I have heard Mr. Hersch's story before it was heartbreaking then and it is a little more heartbreaking to follow his son as he pieces the whole story together.The way this book is written is beautiful as you go through and follow the story that is David Hersch's life. His most intimate moments, possibly the scariest time of his life. This book is a must read. I would highly suggest it.
Jack has written a beautiful tribute to his father, what a wonderfully written book. You can tell how much respect he has for his father in reading this. I would highly recommend it.
Netgalley gave me this book in exhange for my honest review.
Like so many holocaust stories it's the descendant of these survivors who their stories. This is more of a historical novel of a man who survived against all odds. I prefer a novel where a hero speaks in his own words.
I have never been able to read a book about Holocaust survivors without getting emotional. As an eighth grade English teacher we have a unit that touches on the Holocaust. When I taught ninth grade English we read Night and other stories about the Holocaust. I have over the years met only one survivor. The only part of her story that stuck with me was the death march she was taken on. To me this is more terrifying than the camps. You may wonder why. In this case the author’s father had the realization that they would soon be freed by the allies. How many of them lost all hope when they were removed from the camp and taken on these long death marches?
The author’s father was like many survivors who talked about their imprisonment, treatment and survival while leaving out so much. I have always wondered why they did this. Were they trying to spare their family the pain that they still felt?
After learning from a relative that a picture of his father at a death camp was up on a website, Jack sets off on a journey to fill in the blanks of his father’s life. He eventually walked the same path his father took. He wanted to understand his father’s experiences. It is my opinion that you can walk the path your parent’s took and learn so much more than you originally knew. I also believe that unless you were actually there that there is no way you can completely understand the horrors. This is a non-fiction story that I highly recommend. We need more voices to tell these stories as the survivors are all beginning to die off. Who will be left to speak for all those who lost their lives during these horrible year?
# Death March Escape # Netgalley
David Hersch was taken from his home in Hungery and placed in one of the worst concentration camp Mauthausen where they had to go and became part of the mining industry. However he was sent on the death march to another concentration camp 30 miles away, by now weighing approx 80lb when he got there somehow he managed to ecape but was soon recaptured. Avoiding death from the nazies. Later on he was sent on another death march 30 miles away back to Mauthausen. Yet again he escaped. He told his story many times over the years. Many years after his death. His son jack found a photo on a Paige about Mauthausen of all places. Jack took the photo not really knowing much about his farthest journey, yet he thought he knew it all. With his dads written notes and photograph. Jack embarks on this journey of his family to try and find out more about his dads survival of the war. I love books like this and hate them at the same time. The emotional rollercoaster of a ride that jack goes on is so emotional you can not help welling tears in your eyes, and the most things I hate about stories like this one is because you know it’s a true story, of death destruction and geniside of Miliions upon millions of people lost their life’s to such cruelty.. It’s so hard to understand how humans beings can treat fellow human beings in such a cruel sadistic way, I am sure as each generation moves on it becomes harder for people my youngest daughter is 25 to accept it’s all true. They are not taught about it in schools anymore. So a lot of people of her age perhaps think it’s just another story. When I sit down and fully explain it’s not a story it’s the truth she still finds it hard to believe, now my father joined up in the secteorld war despite him being exempt because he was a coal miner, no off he went lied about his age and at 15 was a soldier. He went on the be recruited by the para regiment. He never spoke much about the war, yet one time along with other alied troops he was talking about liberating one of the concentration camps. My farther never showed any emotion until that day he told Us about some of the things he saw. Truthfully he didn’t tell us much, as he was talking his eyes started to fill with tears. Suddenly he just stopped. The only thing he said after that was he’s seen things no man should have seen. It must have been a really sad yet emotional journey for jack. At the same time he must also have experienced such amount of pride in his farther escapes. He stated to pride he felt, yet I felt he was holding back at the same time out of respect of all those that died.. it’s a journey of love cruelty, survival and death. It’s a story we all. One that should never ever be forgotten. A 5 star review from me. However whoever reads this, and I am talking about the grandchildren if those that fought and liberated the concentration camps to understand that this is a true story and just because it’s no longer taught in schools. IT DID HAPPEN
Thank you Netgalley for the ARC of this book. Jack J. Hersch heard from his cousin one day that his fathers picture was on a memorial website for WW2. Jack had heard his father's story all his life so thought he knew all he needed to know. His fathers story was so incredible and remarkable, he actually knew very little. This is a beautiful telling of one mans suffering and success through the war. It is also a story of one mans search for his fathers truth, and his own. Well written and wonderfully accurate. I would recommend this to anyone who enjoys non fiction, war books and coming of age stories.
Title : Death March Escape
By : Jack J Hersch
Genre: Nonfiction :
Biographies & Memoirs ,
Pages: 253
book synopsis :
In June 1944, the Nazis locked eighteen-year-old Dave Hersch into a railroad boxcar and shipped him from his hometown of Dej, Hungary, to Mauthausen Concentration Camp, the harshest, cruellest camp in the Reich. After ten months in the granite mines of Mauthausen's nearby sub-camp, Gusen, he weighed less than 80lbs, nothing but skin and bones.
Somehow surviving the relentless horrors of these two brutal camps, as Allied forces drew near Dave was forced to join a death march to Gunskirchen Concentration Camp, over thirty miles away. Soon after the start of the march, and more dead than alive, Dave summoned a burst of energy he did not know he had and escaped. Quickly recaptured, he managed to avoid being killed by the guards. Put on another death march a few days later, he achieved the impossible: he escaped again.
Dave often told his story of survival and escape, and his son, Jack, thought he knew it well. But years after his father's death, he came across a photograph of his father on, of all places, the Mauthausen Memorial's website. It was an image he had never seen before - and it propelled him on an intensely personal journey of discovery.
My thoughts
rating:5
Would I recommend it : yes
This story was an amazing read from start to finish , it was also an emotional read as well but then again when it comes to nonfiction and especially the ones that are about WWI or WW2 then you know your going to feel the emotions, there was times i had to stop read it not because I wasn't enjoying it or liking it but because of how I felt. This book its just a story about a son loving his father and wanting to understand more about him ,but its also part of his history as well as the history of how the Jews was traded, about family that helped one man , even though it was dangerous , and how one man lost most if not all of his family doing this troubled times, how the Germans would pick and choose who would live and who would did , and especially about the death marches ,and how one man man not only escape from it once but 2 times and lived to pass the story on to his son the author. The story is haunting but its also a story that can not be ignore or forget. And one that needed to be told , With that said I want to thank Netgalley as well as the publishers for letting me read and review it , exchange for my honest opinion.
Death March
noun
A death march is a forced march of prisoners of war or other captives or deportees in which individuals are left to die along the way.
Eighteen-year-old Dave Hersch was one among the thousands of Jews who were coerced to make the 30 mile 'Death March' to a concentration camp by the ruthless Nazis in the early 1940s. True to its name, the march was yet another devious scheme invented by the Nazis to minimize the Jew population by subjecting them to a walk, long enough to drain the Jews of Energy and life. If the Nazis notice even the slightest hint of tiredness from the marchers, it was more than enough for them to put a bullet in their heads. Running away was not even an option to be considered. But then there was Dave Hersch, a gritty young Jew who cheated death by managing to give the Nazis the slip not once but twice. Trust me, that wasn't all. Death March was nothing but one among the countless schemes devised by Nazis to kill Jews. There were far worse methods they employed, things which people of the current generation have absolutely no idea about. From Being put up at Mauthausen Concentration Camp, one of the cruelest Nazi camps, Dave had seen and gone through whatever death seeking measures that the Nazis inflicted on the Jews.
'Death March Escape' is a true account of the life of Dave Hersch, a gritty young Jew, who was one of those rarest of rarest souls to escape from the grasps of the Nazis during the Second World War.
For someone who has never read a Historical Non-Fiction book before, this one literally blew my mind.
It was hard for me to follow the narrative initially due to the huge dosage of information that reeked from every page. But once I got the hang of it, I couldn't put the book down. Each and every piece of info was unheard of and fed my curiosity's never-ending appetite. The way the Jews were treated, calling it 'Cruel' would be a mere understatement. Even as a reader, reading about all those horrendous happenings, it was hard for me to digest. I can't fathom how Dave or the fellow Jews went through such pain and heartbreak without succumbing to death.
Here is the best part, the entire book was written by Jack Hersch, who is none other than the son of the 'Man who cheated Death' - Dave Hersch. It all started when Jack receives a call from his cousin who discovers Dave's photograph being displayed in Mauthausen Memorial's website. Confused at first, Jack starts to dig deeper to find the source of the photo, an action that later transformed into a full-fledged quest to trace the journey of his late father. He follows the footsteps of his father by visiting the exact places where his father had set foot. The Narrative is quite interesting as the author alternates between the reality and the past giving us a clear picture of how the abandoned, wrecked buildings/establishments of today were once the most horrendous places for a human to be in. The hardships and struggle Dave underwent, the kind of life he lived, serves as a great source of inspiration not only for his son but also for me, as a reader.
To sum it all up, 'Death March Escape' was an emotional and a deeply riveting read.
A really awesome read. What a really liked about the author is how he tells the story. He tells the amazing story as he learns it - from both his fathers first hand account and those were there. Really great research and it has such a great feel, unlike other books. It was not a story about the holocaust, but rather a story about learning about a fathers journey though hell. I would highly recommend this book to everyone.
The author is the son of a Jew survivor of the concentration camp. The survivor is his father who escaped twice from the Nazis, which is very rare.
I really enjoyed the book; however, I was looking for specific details to be shared. The author tells the story of father and retraces his father's story to walked where his father walked. Throughout the reading, I can feel how much he honors his father.
What I got out of the book was how honorable and brave his father was in enduring the suffering that fell upon him.