Society Magazine

BOOK REVIEW: The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris

Posted on the 16 November 2018 by Berniegourley @berniegourley

BOOK REVIEW: The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather MorrisThe Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

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At its core, this is a love story set in the most unlikely of places, the Auschwitz Concentration Camp - which was in reality an extermination camp where Jews and others were executed as part of the Nazi Final Solution. Lale, the lead character, owing to his skill with languages and his survival instincts, was a prisoner chosen to be the assistant tattooist and in short order the tattooist's replacement. As tattooist, Lale was responsible for writing numbers indelibly on the arms of the adult prisoners coming to the Auschwitz and Birkenau camps. This position offered him an unusual freedom of movement that allowed him to carry on a secretive relationship with one of the young women that he'd tattoo'd and become instantly smitten with. It also allowed him to carry out a small-scale relief mission in which he purchased food and medicine from a couple of sympathetic Poles. Still, this covert charitable work didn't erase his guilt of believing he was participating in the atrocity by way of the tattoo-branding of his fellow prisoners. In a place where everyday was a test of survival, it goes without saying that both his love affair and his covert purchases created a heightened risk of being killed. The tension is perpetually high as one never knows whether Lale or those dear to him will survive from one scene to the next.

It's testament to how tight and engaging the narrative arc is that I was under the impression that it was completely fictitious until I got to the back matter - which included an epilogue, an afterword, and a photo section that clarified that the book was based on interviews with the real-life tattooist, Lale Sokolov. The book is presented as a novel, and that's how it reads throughout, but it's in some measure a memoir. It's hard to know how much is fictitious, but it seems reasonable to suspect that the author took some liberties - otherwise it would presumably have been presented as a history / biography.

I found this to be one of the most intense and gripping books I've read this year, and I'd highly recommend it for all readers.

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