Mischling
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It's 1944 when the twin sisters arrive at Auschwitz with their mother and grandfather. In their benighted new world, Pearl and Stasha Zagorski take refuge in their identical natures, comforting themselves with the private language and shared games of their childhood. As part of the experimental population of twins known as Mengele's Zoo, the girls experience privileges and horrors unknown to others, and they find themselves changed, stripped of the personalities they once shared, their identities altered by the burdens of guilt and pain.
That winter, at a concert orchestrated by Mengele, Pearl disappears. Stasha grieves for her twin, but clings to the possibility that Pearl remains alive. When the camp is liberated by the Red Army, she and her companion Feliks - a boy bent on vengeance for his own lost twin - travel through Poland's devastation. Undeterred by injury, starvation, or the chaos around them, motivated by equal parts danger and hope, they encounter hostile villagers, Jewish resistance fighters, and fellow refugees, their quest enabled by the notion that Mengele may be captured and brought to justice within the ruins of the Warsaw Zoo. As the young survivors discover what has become of the world, they must try to imagine a future within it.
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Reviews for Mischling
176 ratings29 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The plot is terribly tragic: the narrators are twin sisters who are subjects of Mengele's horrific experiments at Auschwitz. Pearl and Stasha try to divide things among themselves, but they also are very close - a closeness tested when they are selected by Mengele for his studies on twins. The horrors start to pile up: children and others are deliberately injured, put in cages, starved, and separated. And even worse, when armies advance and Mengele (and his collaborators) flee, the survivors struggle to fully realize what has happened and find their way back to loved ones. I struggled with reading this novel, maybe because the heaviness of story particularly weighed on me for some reason.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5What Strength Is
Those interested in a purely factual account of what transpired to twins at Auschwitz, in particular the tortures disguising as experiments administered and personally conducted by Josef Mengele, may be better served by books such as Children of the Flames: Dr. Josef Mengele and the Untold Story of the Twins of Auschwitz (combines survivor testimony with facts about Mengele’s life and “experiments”). In her debut novel, Konar covers much of what took place, including Mengele’s interaction with the children in his “Zoo” and his personal mannerisms, but hers is a venture into literary fiction that often times ascends to the lyrical. What she does here, often well, is convey the psychological and emotional effects of Auschwitz, Mengele, and his experiments, by following twelve-year-old twins Pearl and Stasha in the concentration camp and beyond. How well this works depends on readers; their expectations and frames of mind will determine how well they appreciate and empathize on a gut human level with the suffering, for certain, but also with the strength, determination, and hope inspired by these characters, and through them with the real life victims of Nazi myth and terror.
The novel divides into two parts, life within Auschwitz and the children’s “Zoo” and directly after the Soviets enter the concentration camp to free the survivors. Both present harrowing and horrifying views of what Pearl and Stasha suffer through and over which they triumph.
Within the camp, Konar provides readers with enough detail to comprehend viscerally how terrifying it was: little children separated upon arrival from their parents; sequestered in what amounted to filthy, foul cubbyholes; driven in ersatz Red Cross ambulances to Mengele’s lab (really an unsanitary chamber of horrors) where they were stripped, cataloged like specimens, and subjected to chemical and surgical experimentation without benefit of anesthetics; and their daily life scrounging for food and living under the literal shadow of death, and often with the dead stacked near them. How they managed to survive was less miracle and more an exercise of sheer will illustrated in the various reveries, remembrances, and psychological subterfuges of Stasha, Pearl, and their companions.
As bad as the these experiences will strike the reader, what follows proves more torturous, both physically and mentally. Perhaps on cursory consideration, you imagine freedom from the camps and then the end of the war the end of the suffering, an admittedly uncomfortable transition to prewar life. Not so, or anywhere near reality, as Stasha and Pearl, long separated and believing against hope the other dead, shamble across the flattened and burned out land- and cityscapes of Poland, many times among maneuvering Soviet troops and fractured, desperate Wehrmacht in the wind down to May 7, 1945 (May 11, in the case of German Army Group Centre). Their post-camp plight is the destruction wrought by total war but a couple standout as particularly noteworthy for readers to ponder involving choices and actions that even under battle conditions seem beyond the pale. One involves Stasha and the combined mercy to a mother and delivery of a child that everybody will find devastating. The second concerns Dr. Miri, the Jewish doctor forced to assist Mengele. Here’s a woman who lost everything dear to her: husband, sisters, and her mental health. The choices she had to make, the actions of life and death she took it upon herself to exercise are beyond anything any reader can imagine until they see them on the pages of Konar’s novel. In remembrance and confession, Miri finally opens up about the burden she bore beginning with her own sisters, which while horrid, peel back only the surface layer of her suffering: “‘My sisters, both lost to me. Orli, dead, months after our arrival. Ibi, dispatched to the Puff. But before they were lost—he made me take their wombs myself.’” (For more on the Puff and Nazi forced prostitution, see House of Dolls.)
How, you wonder, do you survive atrocities like those dramatized in Mischling? Konar’s novel is about that, but really much more. She writes about the strength of the human spirit bolstered by hope, by the goodness life can offer, by what really matters in living beyond the mere acting out of survival. Amid the abundance of carnage and suffering there threads this hope, and it is the strength of her novel. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Another heartbreaking book about the Holocaust. This time about children (twins, multiples) used as experiments by Josef Mengele. So much horror.
Book was a little slow, but mainly due to its attention to detail and descriptions. All these stories need to be told so that we never forget and never let it happen again. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book crawled beneath my skin and wrecked my heart. The poor children and all that they went through. I can’t fathom the tragedy, horror, and faithlessness that lived within their tiny minds. Yet, the strength and perseverance that so many showed is quite commendable.
Stasha and Pearl were twins at Auschwitz. From day one, they were test dummies. “Uncle” came in throwing around magical words and candy, and then stripped the girls of every last bit of dignity. He flat out tortured them. He poked and prodded, stripped them down, and messed with their minds. Together though, the girls made a pact to live. They split up duties and began making the best of the hell they were living through.
When they were separated though things got blurry. Death lingered about the surface and endless possibilities began to take form. Each girl had a solid foundation in a friend and while they slowly navigated towards another, all chaos broke loose. There were guns fights, beautiful horses, childbirth, sauerkraut barrels, gold temples, and more...
I can’t recommend this book enough. It’s not a fun book. In all honesty, it’s a hard one to digest. The impact though, and the sacrifice need felt by all. It’s a dark dark read about a dark dark time. It’s gut wrenching, emotionally draining, and pure evil. The words left me breathless at times and I slowly turned the pages because I needed time to process all of the horror within the words. I think Stasha was my favorite, just because her personality screamed from the pages, but Pearl also tugged at my heart strings because it was her, that was worse off.
If you’re still uncertain, just trust me and read it. You may not like it, but never forget that it’s history and it’s really not supposed to be liked— it’s to be felt. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is the story of twins, Pearl and Stasha, who are Polish Jews. They are captured and sent to Auschwitz, and become victims of the terrible experiments of Josef Mengele. In 1945, when the camp is liberated, Stasha and Pearl are separated, but each seeks to find the other. This is a story of love and family. It is beautifully written, although there is tremendous horror in the book.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5*I received a free copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review*
The beginning of this book tells a little about the history of twins Pearl and Stasha and what happened when they arrived at Auschwitz. They become part of Josef Mengele's horrific experiments and do everything they can to hold on to each other. I am not a twin and do not know if twins experience this, but when the girls could peek into the other's mind and read their thoughts, I found it a little hard to believe. The author's style has a creative writing feel to it, which could be distracting at times in the story. I was really hooked in the beginning, but as the girls became separated, it became a little less interesting to me. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Up until recently, I had to stop reading books set during WWII. I couldn’t take anymore horror. I was having nightmares about hiding in a subway tunnel during the Blitz. The truth is, though, that these horrors actually happened, and they were real life nightmares to so many. So, I’m not giving up.
Mischling is worth it, even if it’s difficult.
Stasha and Pearl are twin sisters who have been sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau as part of Mengele’s Zoo. There are atrocities. There is torture, medical experimentation, unspeakable dehumanization. By being part of the Zoo, the sisters believe that they may be getting special treatment and their mother and grandfather are better taken care of. The torture the girls undergo, however, isn’t always explicit. Konar has a delicate hand, and many of the terrors are indirect and left up to the imagination of the reader, often to an even more powerful effect.
What I appreciated most is that the story of the sisters doesn’t end with the liberation of the camps. There is no scene of the girls grabbing a Russian soldier by the hand and being led into the sunshine through the gates. There is no “happily ever after” now that the war is over. There is only “after.” The real story starts after the horrors of the camp have ended. Now the children of Mengele’s Zoo are free, but they’re lost. They have no families, they can’t find their parents or siblings. The children and those adults who were forced to assist Mengele with his experiments are left to fend for themselves, burdened with the memories of what they had to endure, and what they had to do to others in order to survive. There were delusional rationalizations they had to construct for self-preservation, and now that clarity has come they’re not sure what’s true anymore.
Please don’t be dissuaded by the subject matter. Like I said above, Mischling is worth it. It’s worth it because it’s honest. One of the sisters is bent on revenge. She fantasizes about plans to hunt and kill Mengele. She contemplates suicide. She imagines what life may be like without her sister, and it’s unendurable. She holds on to violence and draws power from it. She seeks how to make herself whole again, but she can’t let go of her anger. This book is about moving forward, finding the strength to believe that there is an “after.”
The effects will last a lifetime, but the love they hold onto will carry them through. Mischling is sorrowful and unimaginable, but it’s also redemptive. The story of Stasha and Pearl deserves to be read.
This review is also posted on flyleafunfurled.com. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This was beautifully written, while still being horrifying as any concentration camp book must be. I liked the overlap with The Zookeeper's Wife, which I read a few months ago. Lovely and thought provoking.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book says it's 353 pages but it felt like it was 553. It was never ending for me and by the end, I just wanted it to end which is never a good sign.
Being a twin, I gravitate to twin to stories but they rarely do anything for me. The authors never seem to hit the mark. So here again, I tried another...
It wasn't bad but I'm glad it's done. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is a "really Liked it" but at 3.5
Review/notes to come - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Striking, and written with a such gorgeous language that the story almost takes on the qualities of a fairy tale, this book is still one which suggests, at only a glance at the blurb on its back, that it will be a difficult read--and, it is. The book follows 12-year-olds Stasha and Pearl, twin girls sent to Auschwitz in 1944 who are then pulled into the circle of the infamous Dr. Josef Mengele, to be a part of his experiments within the concentration camp.
Without doubt, that sentence alone is enough to send some readers running away from the book. Others, just as certainly, will read the book blurb's first few sentences and put the book down, or begin it... and leave it unfinished. Before I read it, I heard the beginning was difficult to get through, and knowing the subject, I prepared myself to dive into it--perhaps, since I read an awful lot of dark books (though normally not so based in fact/history as this one is), I managed the beginning alright, and in fact expected worse. And yet, still, there were times when the emotion, and the reminder that this was based in truth more than fiction, made it so that I had to put the book down, and I even thought once about not finishing, I admit -- but then I kept going, and was glad I had. But, in truth, it was the last part of the book that was most difficult for me personally to read, so that I have to mention it, as well. I suppose it comes down to whether you can more easily read about immediate pain or drawn-out grief, or torture or its aftermath, which will determine whether the beginning or the end of the book is more difficult. For me, the ending pieces of the book made the whole story all the more real, and painful almost tangible, albeit that this was a story peopled only occasionally by real characters, and I probably took twice as long to get through the final six chapters as I did the first 3/4ths of the book.
But, was it worth it? Yes.
Affinity Konar has pieced together a masterful and emotional view into not only characters placed in Mengele's so-called 'zoo', but into the beauty, love, emotion, and survival involved within such walls as these found at Auschwitz--but without, for even a moment, romanticizing or easing the view. She hasn't dwelled on the pain or the physicality of it, or even the grief, but she has not avoided any of that, either. It's not a story that's easily read, as beautifully written and carefully researched and fast-moving (yes, fast-moving) as it is. And as someone who writes, I can't imagine the pain involved in writing it and living with the characters she's peopled this work with. But at the same time, it is an important and powerful work of fiction. More than any non-battlefield WWII fiction I've read, this carries with it a weight of history and emotion that, for me, makes it all the more beautiful and terrible.
Not all readers will be able to read this. If I were still teaching contemporary literature, I imagine I'd tell my students they Should read it, but feel that I couldn't ask them to, and I imagine I'll tell others about this book and only recommend it carefully, or half-heartedly, knowing what a difficult read it is. I'm not sure I could give it as a gift or demand anyone, student or otherwise, go through it--it's that difficult a read because of the content, and the weight involved in the story. But, that said, it is also a book which is remarkable and careful, and utterly worth reading if you can. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Beautiful prose. Emotional, and pathos-invoking. Makes me hold my child tighter and more thankful for his happiness.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I have not been so moved by a book in a very long time. I haven't cried at a book in a very long time. This book has done both for me.
So well-written and you are so invested in these two girls. Terrible things that went on during that war are so hard to even imagine. The book does not get gory, but doesn't have to. The gore is from the thoughts of the young children.
To me, this is a book that should be listed on the 1001 books to read before you die list. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Mischling by Affinity Konar
Twins, Stasha and Pearl Zagorski arrive in Auschwitz with their mother and grandfather. They are then taken and become part of an experimental group called the Mengele's Zoo. They have special privileges, yet it comes at a price. Cruel and inhumane experiments on them. The two once were very close, but begin to feel their true selves disappear as time goes on.
Then one day Pearl dissapears. Stasha is grieve stricken, sadden by the loss of her sister. She remains hopeful that her sister is alive, somewhere. Once the camp becomes liberated Stasha and her friend Feliks begin the long journey to find Pearl.
A heart wrenching story of the brutalities of the "twins experiments", the closeness of sisters, separation of family and survival. Raw and vividly detailed I was at times horrified by what happened to these girls.
I being and identical twin could relate to the closeness between Stasha and Pearl, it truly is hard to explain unless you are a twin. Affinity Konar was able to capture the feelings of the special bond that twins share. Along with the horrific crimes during the Holocaust, I was really emotionally drawn to this story. I highly recommend Mischling to all. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This was challenging reading for me. Jewish twins are separated from family as they enter into a Nazi concentration camp, but where they are sent is not any better. They become part of Mengale’s human experimentation. Somehow thought she is able to show how even condemned to such cruelty, human forgiveness is even more powerful.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Story narrates the lives of a pair of twins assigned to be studied under Joseph Mengela's reign of terrot in Hitlers concentration camps. The story is told mostly from the perspective of the stronger, surviving twin. Bleak, horrific tale.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This was too poetic to my taste so you might as well disconsider my review if this seems to fit yours. If it doesn't seem, read on.
With many elements similar to The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, how could it have gone so boring?
Stasha and Pearl are one pair among the many twins Doctor Mengele experiments with in the Auschwitz Zoo. One is preserved while the other receives every insane test, but that doesn't mean any of them is safe physical or mentally. While we're introduced to the many characters in the Zoo, we can only hope they'll make it alive.
The narration, divided between the sisters, is probably the big thing about this book. It is somewhat inconsistent and that makes for a good show of how their psyche deteriorates as time goes by. At the same time, the author failed to make the reading as interesting for people like me who aren't into more introspective narrations. Also, for half the book, whenever it was Stasha's turn—Pearl's was much more grounded—, she described things so... uniquely? I had no idea what was happening and no will to reread until I understood.
I can't say the characters were all that lovable. I wasn't even sure if I wanted them to get out of there alive, as it became clear they would be safe and sound ever again. One thing this book did well was to depict Mengele's cruelty in depth without being crude. In no moment the story becomes flourished, enchanting or magical but it wasn't anything close to gore. At the same time I don't recommend to the sensitive, I'm sure this could have been much more raw.
The ending wasn't bad but it lacked better explaining. I still wonder how all that was possible, and to be honest I felt a little aggravated by some reveals.
This book isn't so much about the war as an attempt to make something different. I applaud the attempt but not the result. I've seen it go great, as with The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, but this was a failure in my opinion. Not that easy to read even if the vocabulary is okay and not exciting in any moment, I took days and days and days. I'd have passed this could I go back in time.
Honest review based on an ARC provided by Netgalley. Many thanks to the publisher for this opportunity. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I don't know what to say except it was a beautifully written novel given the subject matter. It's never easy to write about this particular period in history and never will be. However at least what an author can do is make it readable and make it a good story worthwhile to read.
You really do feel for Stasha and Pearl once they're herded into the camp and are used as experimental fodder to play with. You see both of them mature rapidly and have their childhoods robbed from them near the start of the novel. They were already close to begin with yet because of the circumstances they're closer with them trying to hold and support each other. It's almost heartbreaking to read because without one, the other just simply feels they don't exist.
As to when Pearl disappears, you feel the separation anxiety as you progress through the novel. You feel Stasha's pain and emptiness. Her other half is gone and she has no idea if she's alive or not. You can feel the void within Stasha and as you continue reading, you're still feeling the pain and you're wondering throughout the novel if she will ever see Pearl again. This is great writing on the authors part as you can distinctly feel what the characters are feeling throughout the novel.
There's a small cast of characters in this book. Some stand out more than others. Bruna stood out for me a lot. I loved every aspect of her and her strength. Then you have Peter, Feliks and the nursing staff at the camp. You don't get attached to them as much as Pearl and Stasha are the main ones to be focused on. However, for me, I really loved Bruna.
The only criticism I would have for this book is I found it sometimes a little too wordy and poetic at times. It made it for some areas of the book hard to follow - it would be best to avoid this type of writing. Yes it sets the mood and makes it melancholy but the subject matter itself is already sad and tragic to begin with. I believe that's enough as it is.
Definitely recommended for those that are interested in this particular historical period. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book is well-written and told. I'm glad it exists, but not necessarily glad to have read it.The story unfolds through alternating narration of a set of twin girls - Pearl and Stasha. They are taken to Auschwitz where they live in Mengele's "Zoo," where they and others are subjected to torturous medical "experiments."While neither grisly or graphic, there were a couple of scenes that were so appalling that I felt heart-sick and wasn't sure I could finish the book. Historical record is relentless. Knowing there were so many people who suffered dreadfully at the hands of other human beings is a real-life horror.It's not a book I could recommend, though I wouldn't dissuade anyone drawn to read it. As important as it is to keep a remembrance of this time in history, reading it felt like carrying an emotional burden without any way or place to release it.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is a desolate and depressing depiction of one of the most horrifying events ever to take place in this world - the torturous medical experiments that Mengele perpetrated on Jewish children, focusing on twins Pearl and Stasha. Fortunately, the writing is not so graphic that you wouldn't be able to get through it - and I say "fortunately" because it's an important story to be told which should never, ever be forgotten. Getting back to the actual book, I was disappointed in the ending, which seemed very abrupt to me, but in the larger scheme of things, this is a minor complaint.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A harrowing tale of twin sisters who are fighting to survive World War II and its aftermath. In 1944 the twins, Sasha and Pearl arrive at Auschwitz and become part of the experimental population of ‘Mengele’s Zoo.’ Brutal, with moments of beauty and hope. I highly recommend it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A special thank you to NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Hauntingly lyrical, and shattering, Mischling is a recount of some of the Holocaust horrors that children in Auschwitz were subjected to at the hands of Dr. Joseph Mengele. Interested in twins, the emotionally stunted Mengele subjects them to horrific experiments.
Our narrators, thirteen year-old twins Pearl and Stasha are two halves of a whole. Stasha is in charge of the funny, the future, and takes on the bad. Pearl is the sad, the good, and the past. They are despair and loss, they are hope and light. Through Konar's thoughtful and magical prose, the girls deliver their story in two halves to the reader in the hopes of becoming whole again.
Like Doerr's quote on the jacket—if your soul can survive the journey, you'll be rewarded by by reading one of the most powerful and beautifully written books of the year. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Could you possibly conceive of a more depressing and potentially horrifying novel, than one set in the Auschwitz concentration camp? Actually, yes; you could set the novel within the camp, in the laboratories of Josef Mengele, as seen through the eyes of a pair of twins who were subjects of his macabre experiments.
Many people will pass on this novel, for obvious and very well understood reasons. All I can tell you is that the author has somehow made this work very readable, without in any way lessening the horror of the activities which took place, and that is quite an accomplishment. The events of the novel are related through the eyes of the two young girls in a somewhat hazy and ethereal fashion, which at the same time, informs the reader of the many atrocities committed at the camp, without being overtly graphic or specific. While I am not usually a fan of this type of writing, I’ve got to say that in this case, it was perhaps the only way to relate the story to a general audience.
The first half of the novel takes place within the camp, while the second half covers the period immediately following “liberation” of the camp and the subsequent wanderings of Mengele’s subjects throughout the Polish countryside. A very depressing subject, but one that in this case, is beautifully presented. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Mischling, Affinity Konar, author; Vanessa Johansson, narrator.
The book was set in 1944, and the abomination of Hitler’s Germany was still thriving. At twelve years old, twins Stasha and Pearl Zagorski were riding in a cattle car with their mother and grandfather. Their father had already disappeared, never to return, after he went out to tend a sick child near the hour of curfew. Now the rest of the family was on their way to Auschwitz, one of the worst Concentration Camps, a death camp, which was also the home of the brutal and sadistic Dr. Josef Mengele. This horrid doctor also went by many other aliases after the war, as he successfully escaped and avoided the justice he so richly deserved for the crimes against humanity he had committed. This story is narrated alternately by each of the twins. Their stories are the stuff of nightmares, but sadly, their stories are based on history. Their stories actually occurred. It is hard to read, but it is necessary to learn and understand man’s capability to do harm, to understand the insanity that sometimes afflicts human beings, and in understanding, perhaps to prevent it from occurring once again.
Both girls were separated from their grandfather and mother almost immediately upon their arrival at Auschwitz. Their mother believing that multiples, like triplets and twins, were given special consideration, pointed them out to a guard who pointed them out to the truly evil Dr. Mengele. She had no idea to what they would now be subjected, although the alternative might have meant their immediate selection for the gas chamber. Pearl and Stasha were chosen to live in the “zoo”, which is what the “Uncle Doctor” Mengele called the area in which the twins and other multiples were housed, tortured and experimented upon. Their uniqueness was considered quite an opportunity for scientific study, using them as lab rats. The nurses, doctors and soldiers were without mercy, and their cruelty seemed to know no bounds. There were a few exceptions, such as Dr. Miri and “Twins’ Father”. They cared for and tried the best they could to protect and help those poor unsuspecting children from the horror that awaited them. They were forced to participate in a charade to make the children feel safer than they ever would be, because they were prisoners too.
There is an emotional tug to this book that takes hold and does not let go as the world of these twins was shattered, as their once joyous, happy life was transformed into a dreadful experience with the ultimate aim of breaking their spirits and their bodies, of destroying them for the sake of science. They were considered vermin like all the others that did not fit the picture of Hitler’s pure Aryan German specimen.
Dr. Mengele could only be considered vile and insane, sadistic and brutally cruel beyond the imagination of any normal human being. How the captive and tortured children learned to survive and find hope and a bit of happiness in the darkness of the world that Mengele created for them, was awe-inspiring, especially since the author researched the background of the “zoo” to make it as authentic as possible, and such things, therefore, did actually exist and occur, not only in her imagination, but, in fact, at the death camp, Auschwitz.
The Holocaust destroyed generations of Jewish families, lives were ended that could never be resurrected, brilliant minds were snuffed out, victims who survived were completely scarred physically and mentally by what they witnessed and lived through, altered beyond repair in some cases. Still, most tried to fight back when they could, tried to begin to live again and reproduce the beauty of their former lives. The ending seemed to be a bit unrealistic, in the breadth and scope of the salvation described, and therefore seemed a bit like a fairytale at the end, but that was the only drawback I found in the novel. All else seemed to follow the history, although the characters were fictitious, of the horror of the year or so that the young twins spent in captivity, until the end of the war and ultimate freedom.
The author’s presentation captured, with descriptive and eloquent prose, the devastation that these youngsters faced and even managed to overcome in some instances. The novel was difficult to read, but its impact was softened by the gifted presentation of the author, so the brutality, as awful as it was when depicted, could be borne by the reader. The author captured the intimacy and unique connection that multiples share in both their emotions and their intellect. She described their spiritual connection as well as their physical one, with a true portrayal of how they were often able to intuit each other’s thoughts and pain. In a coincidental connection to me, the Dr. Pearl introduced by the author at the end of the book, happened to have been my mother-in-law’s doctor so I had been privy to some of her stories prior to this reading.
As a twin, I can attest to the feeling of loss when one is no longer with the other. There is a unique emptiness that feels like the survivor is missing a piece of themselves. This, in itself, makes Mengele’s cruelty that much worse. He seemed to understand and exploit the beauty of those relationships. Still, he did no act alone, and as long as I live, I will never understand the mindset of those who went along with Hitler, his thugs and his madmen, the women who supported his barbaric, insane needs, ideas and behavior. Those who survived needed great courage to go on with the horrid memories that were imprinted upon their minds. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Many people won't read this book because the subject matter is brutal, the story is brutal, just to think about what people do to other people is brutal. But then they would miss the wonder of the language, the finely wrought descriptions of beauty found in horror, and they would miss a strange and wonderful story of hope. There are some issues with the plot, yes, but by the time that happens you seriously don't give a shit.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Author did a lot of research and it shows. Well done. I still think about Stasha and Pearl.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5MISCHLING is not your usual Holocaust novel. Not to be misconstrued, there is plenty of horror in this book, but Konar approaches it obliquely through the eyes of the 12 year-old Zagorski twins, Pearl and Stasha. Konar aptly refers to her book as a story of “masking and then unmasking.” These youthful narrators are prone to obscuring and misunderstanding the horrors they face and this serves them for a time as a successful coping method until it ceases to work. The atrocities of the Holocaust and Mengele’s cruel “experiments” have been well documented, so the reader knows what Pearl and Stasha are really facing without Konar having to spell it out. Instead, she manages to create narrative tension through the voices and language of her two narrators. Using their interior monologues, she skillfully focuses on the ordeals that twins and disabled children must have faced in Auschwitz at the hands of the psychopathic “Uncle Doctor.”
The plot of MISCHLING comes in two parts pre- and post-liberation. In the first, Pearl and Stasha are assigned to Mengele’s Zoo where they are separated from each other. Pearl is tortured while Stasha is kept as an experimental control. The twins are extremely close. They like to play a game where they read each other’s mind. But Mengele separates them and this proves to be a form of torture for both. Pearl is an introvert and highly observant. She keeps notes of their experiences. Stasha is the extrovert. She develops close alliances with other children in the zoo, plots revenge, and pines for her sister. Mengele is not a prominent character in the story. Instead he appears as a shadowy and threatening presence in the twins’ world. By contrast, the other characters appear as heroic figures. Bruna, the Romani albino, is self-confident and brazen. Twins' Father attempts to rescue children by passing them off as twins. Dr. Miri, a Jewish physician forced to assist Mengele, is profoundly conflicted about her role. She speaks of it after the liberation, “These are only some of the brutalities I can speak of. They are too innumerable and varied, so grotesque — I do not have the words.” Peter has a favorable position in the camp as the Nazis’ messenger. He develops a caring relationship with Pearl. Feliks has lost his twin brother to Mengele’s barbarism, a condition that Stasha can appreciate. Following the liberation of the camp, they embark on a hapless journey to find and punish Mengele.
The post-liberation part of the novel follows the former inmates as they are either marched to their deaths by Nazi guards, or liberated by the Russians. Konar manages to capture the total chaos that must have prevailed after liberation. In their travels to Warsaw looking for Mengele, Stasha and Feliks encounter multiple adversities, including other refugees, Jewish fighters seeking to kill Nazi sympathizers, and hostile villagers. Action adventure drives this section, and thus it seems to fall short of the subtler and more meditative quality of the earlier part. Pearl’s journey to Krakow in a wheelbarrow works better because of the guilt and psychological pain being experienced by her two companions, Twins’ Father and Dr. Miri. The ending of the novel seems too contrived and too redemptive. One doubts that “happily ever after” would be in store for most of the people so damaged by this experience.
Konar’s research is evident in her deft re-imagination of Auschwitz in 1944. In addition to the bizarre world of Mengele’s Zoo, she also relates how the Nazis stored seized possessions in a facility the inmates called “Canada” and the brothel servicing guards known as “Puff.”
In general the writing is excellent, seamlessly blending reality with fantasy using lyrical prose. However, distinguishing between the two was often problematic. Likewise, the choice of mischling as the title seems enigmatic because the word was used by the Nazis to denote people of mixed Jewish and Aryan heritage. Clearly this was not the case with Pearl and Stasha. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a beautifully written story about one of the most horrific times in our world’s history. In 1944 12-year-old Jewish twins Pearl and Stasha were brought to Auschwitz with their mother and grandfather. Their father had disappeared before they were taken and told he had committed suicide. Once at Auschwitz, the twins were chosen to take part in the cruel and inhumane experiments of Josef Mengele. Ultimately separated, the twins fought to survive against overwhelming odds with the help of others, even as they became aware of their mother and grandfather’s deaths. Finally freed, they seek vengeance and each other. This is an amazing fictional account of that time period and what man is capable of, both good and evil.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Mischling is a term that was used by the Third Reich to describe people who had Aryan and Jewish blood. The novel begins when 12 year old twins Pearl and Stasha are in a cattle car bound for Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944 along with their mother and grandfather. When they arrive, the twins are sent to 'the Zoo' by Dr Mengle. The Zoo is where he kept twins, triplets and other children that he thought were interesting so that he could perform physical and mental experiments on them. In this area, they had a little more freedom but the things that were done to them were unimaginable. This story is told through the eyes of Pearl and Stasha in alternating chapters.
Pearl and Stasha are definitely two halves of the whole. Pearl remembers the past and the sad while Stasha is assigned to remember the funny and the future. They are so connected that they know what each other is thinking and feeling until they start trying to block the pain that Dr Mengle is inflicting on them to keep the other from feeling their pain. They make friends and learn to live in their new environment because they are told that their cooperation will help their mother and grandfather. Their story is heartbreaking but there is also hope for the future sprinkled through their stories.
I am not going to tell you that this is an easy book to read. I had to put it down more than once because I just couldn't imagine what was being done to these children in the name of medicine. One good thing is that the author doesn't go into great detail about the experimentation but if you are at all familiar with this time period, you know what's happening. I am definitely glad that I read this book and I know that the characters of Pearl and Stasha are going to stay in my mind. Will you cry while you read it -- ABSOLUTELY -- but you will also see those small opportunities for hope in the future.
Book preview
Mischling - Affinity Konar
PART ONE
STASHA
CHAPTER ONE
World After World
We were made, once. My twin, Pearl, and me. Or, to be precise, Pearl was formed and I split from her. She embossed herself on the womb; I copied her signature. For eight months we were afloat in amniotic snowfall, two rosy mittens resting on the lining of our mother. I couldn’t imagine anything grander than the womb we shared, but after the scaffolds of our brains were ivoried and our spleens were complete, Pearl wanted to see the world beyond us. And so, with newborn pluck, she spat herself out of our mother.
Though premature, Pearl was a sophisticated prankster. I assured myself that it was just one of her tricks; she’d be back to laugh at me. But when Pearl failed to return, I lost my breath. Have you ever had to live with the best part of yourself adrift, stationed at some unknowable distance? If so, I am sure you are aware of the dangers of this condition. After my breath left me, my heart followed suit, and my brain ran with an unthinkable fever. In my fetal pinkness, I faced this truth: without her, I would become a split and unworthy thing, a human incapable of love.
That is why I followed my sister’s lead and allowed the doctor’s hands to tear me out and smack me and hold me to the light. Let us note that I never cried during the ruptures of this unwanted transition. Not even when our parents ignored my wish to be named Pearl too.
I became Stasha instead. And with the chore of birth complete, we entered the world of family and piano and book, of days that baffled by in beauty. We were so alike—we were always dropping marbles from the window onto the paving stones and watching them descend the hill with our binoculars, just to see how far their little lives would take them.
That world, teeming with awe, ended too. Most worlds do.
But I must tell you: There was another world we knew. Some say it was the world that made us the most. I want to say that they are wrong, but for now, let me tell you that our entry into this world began in our twelfth year of life, when we were huddled side by side in the back of a cattle car.
During that journey of four days and four nights, we cheated our way into survival under Mama’s and Zayde’s instruction. For sustenance, we passed an onion back and forth and licked its yellow hide. For entertainment, we played the game Zayde made for us, a game called the Classification of Living Things. In this form of charades, you had to portray a living thing, and the players had to name the species, the genus, the family, and so on, all the way to the encompassing brilliance of a kingdom.
The four of us passed through so many living things in the cattle car; we postured from bear to snail and back—it was important, Zayde emphasized in his thirst-cracked voice, that we organize the universe to the best of our too-human ability—and when the cattle car finally came to a stop I stopped my charade too. The way I remember it, I was in the middle of trying to convince Mama that I was an amoeba. It’s possible that I was portraying some other living thing and that I am remembering it as an amoeba now only because I felt so small in that moment, so translucent and fragile. I cannot be sure.
Just as I was about to admit defeat, the door to the cattle car rolled open.
And the incoming light was so startling that we dropped our onion on the floor, and it rolled down the ramp, a smelly and half-eaten moon that landed at the feet of a guard. I imagine that his face was full of disgust, but I couldn’t see it—he held a kerchief over his nostrils while issuing a series of sneezes, and he stopped sneezing only to hover his boot above our onion and cast an eclipsing shadow over the tiny globe. We watched the onion weep as he crushed it, its tears a bitter pulp. He then resumed his approach, and we scrambled to hide in the shelter of Zayde’s voluminous coat. Though we had outgrown Zayde as a hiding place long ago, fear made us smaller, and we contorted within the coat folds beside his dwindled body, leaving our grandfather a lumpy, many-legged figure. In this shelter, we blinked. Then we heard a sound—a stomp, a shuffle—the guard’s boots were immediately before us.
What kind of insect are you?
he asked Zayde, rapping each of the girlish legs that emerged beneath the coat with a walking stick. Our knees smarted. Then the guard struck Zayde’s legs too. Six legs? You are a spider?
It was clear that the guard had no real understanding of living things at all. Already, he’d made two errors. But Zayde didn’t bother to point out that spiders aren’t insects and that, in fact, they are possessors of eight legs. Traditionally, Zayde enjoyed issuing playful, singsong corrections, as he liked to see all the facts put to rights. In that place, though—it was too dangerous to express any intimate knowledge of creatures that crawled or were considered lowly, lest you be accused of bearing too much in common with them. We should have known better than to make an insect of our grandfather.
I asked you a question,
the guard insisted while issuing another rap to our legs with his stick. What kind?
In German, Zayde gave him facts: His name was Tadeusz Zamorski. He was sixty-five years old. He was a Polish Jew. He ended there, as if all were told.
And we wanted to continue for him, we wanted to give all the details: Zayde was a former professor of biology. He’d taught the subject at universities for decades but was an expert in many things. If you wanted to know about the insides of a poem, he would be the one to ask. If you wanted to know how to walk on your hands or find a star, he’d show you. With him, we once saw a rainbow that ran only red, saw it straddle a mountain and a sea, and he toasted the memory of it often. To unbearable beauty! he’d cry, eyes abrim. He was so fond of toasts that he made them indiscriminately, for nearly any occasion. To a morning swim! To the lindens at the gate! And in recent years, there was this, his most common toast: To the day my son returns, alive and unchanged!
But as much as we would have liked to, we said nothing of these things to the guard—the details caught in our throats, and our eyes were tearful because of the death of the nearby onion. The tears were the onion’s fault, we told ourselves, nothing more, and we wiped the drops away so that we could see what was happening through the holes in Zayde’s coat.
Encircled in the portholes of these flaws were five figures: three little boys, their mother, and a white-coated man who stood with a pen cocked over a little book. The boys intrigued us—we’d never seen triplets before. In Lodz, there had been another set of girl twins, but a trio was the stuff of books. Though we were impressed by their number, we had to admit that we trumped them in terms of identicality. All three had the same dark curls and eyes, the same spindly bodies, but they wore different expressions—one squinted at the sun, while the other two frowned, and their faces fell into similarity only when the white-coated man distributed candy into each of their palms.
The triplets’ mother was different than all the other mothers of the cattle car—her distress was neatly tucked away, and she stood as still as a stopped clock. One of her hands drifted over her sons’ heads in some perpetual hesitation, as if she felt that she no longer had the right to touch them. The white-coated man did not share this attitude.
He was an intimidating figure, all shiny black shoes and dark hair of equal polish, his sleeves so expansive that when he lifted an arm, the fabric below billowed and winged and claimed a disproportionate measure of sky. He was movie-star handsome and prone to dramatics; kindly expressions swelled across his face with obviousness, as if he was eager to let everyone near know the extremity of his good intentions.
Words passed between the mother and the white-coated man. They seemed like agreeable words, though the man did most of the talking. We wished we could hear the conversation, but it was enough, I suppose, to see what happened next: the mother passed her hands over the dark clouds of the triplets’ hair, and then she turned her back, leaving the boys with the white-coated man.
He was a doctor, she said as she walked away, a falter in her step. They would be safe, she assured them, and she did not look back.
Our mother, hearing this, gave a little squeak and a gasp before reaching over to tug at the guard’s arm. Her boldness was a shock. We were used to a trembling mother, one who always shook while making requests of the butcher and hid from the cleaning woman. Always, it was as if pudding ran through her veins, making her constantly aquiver and defeatable, especially since Papa’s disappearance. In the cattle car, she’d steadied herself only by drawing a poppy on the wooden wall. Pistil, petal, stamen—she drew with a strange focus, and when she stopped drawing, she went to pieces. But on the ramp she discovered a new solidity—she stood stronger than the starved and weary should ever stand. Was the music responsible for this alteration? Mama always loved music, and this place was teeming with bright notes; they found us in the cattle car and drew us out with a distrustful cheer. Over time, we’d learn the depths of this trick and know to beware of the celebratory tune, as it held only suffering at its core. The orchestra had been entrusted with the deception of all that entered. They were compelled, these musicians, to use their talents to ensnare the unwitting, to convince them that where they had arrived was a place not entirely without an appreciation for the humane and the beautiful. Music—it uplifted the arriving crowds, it flowed beside them as they walked through the gates. Was this why Mama was able to be bold? I would never know. But I admired her courage as she spoke.
It is good here—to be a double?
she asked the guard.
He gave her a nod and turned to the doctor, who was squatting in the dust so that he could address the boys at eye level. The group appeared to be having the warmest of chats.
Zwillinge!
the guard called to him. Twins!
The doctor left the triplets to a female attendant and strode over to us, his shiny boots disrupting the dust. He was courtly with our mother, taking her hand as he addressed her.
You have special children?
His eyes were friendly, from what we could see.
Mama shifted from foot to foot, suddenly diminished. She tried to withdraw her hand from his grasp but he held it tight, and then he began to stroke her palm with his gloved fingertips, as if it were some wounded, but easily soothed, thing.
Only twins, not triplets,
she apologized. I hope they are enough.
The doctor’s laugh was loud and showy and it echoed within the caverns of Zayde’s coat. We were relieved when it subsided so that we could listen to Mama rattling off our gifts.
They speak some German. Their father taught them. They’ll turn thirteen in December. Healthy readers, the both of them. Pearl loves music—she is quick, practical, studies dance. Stasha, my Stasha
—here Mama paused, as if unsure how to categorize me, and then declared—she has an imagination.
The doctor received this information with interest, and requested that we join him on the ramp.
We hesitated. It was better within the suffocations of the coat. Outside, there was a gray, flame-licked wind that alerted us to our grief, and a scorched scent that underpinned it; there were guns casting shadows and dogs barking and drooling and growling as only dogs bred for cruelty can. But before we had a chance to withdraw farther, the doctor pulled aside the curtains of the coat. In the sunlight, we blinked. One of us snarled. It might have been Pearl. It was probably me.
How could it be, the doctor marveled, that these perfect features could be wasted on such dour expressions? He drew us out, made us turn for him, and had us stand back to back so he could appreciate the exactitudes of us.
Smile!
he instructed.
Why did we obey this particular order? For our mother’s sake, I suppose. For her, we grinned, even as she clung to Zayde’s arm, her face lit with panic, two drops of sweat tripping down her forehead. Ever since we’d entered the cattle car, I’d avoided looking at our mother. I looked at the poppy she drew instead; I focused on the fragile bloom of its face. But something about her false expression made me acknowledge what Mama had become: a pretty but sleepless semi-widow, faded in her personhood. Once the primmest of women, she was undone; dust streaked her cheek, her lace collar lay limp. Dull gems of blood secured themselves to the corners of her lips where she’d gnawed on them in worry.
"They are mischlinge?" he asked. That yellow hair!
Mama pulled at her dark curls, as if ashamed of their beauty, and shook her head.
My husband—he was fair
was all she could say. It was the only answer she had when asked about the coloring that made certain onlookers insist that our blood was mixed. As we’d grown, that word mischling—we heard it more and more, and its use in our presence had inspired Zayde to give us the Classification of Living Things. Never mind this Nuremberg abomination, he’d say. He’d tell us to ignore this talk of mixed breeds, crossed genetics, of quarter-Jews and kindred, these absurd, hateful tests that tried to divide our people down to the last blood drop and marriage and place of worship. When you hear that word, he’d say, dwell on the variation of all living things. Sustain yourself, in awe of this.
I knew then, standing before the white-coated doctor, that this advice would be difficult to take in the days to come, that we were in a place that did not answer to Zayde’s games.
Genes, they are funny things, yes?
the doctor was saying.
Mama, she didn’t even try to engage him in this line of conversation.
If they go with you
—and here she would not look at us— when will we see them again?
On your Sabbath,
the doctor promised. And then he turned to us and exclaimed over our details—he loved that we spoke German, he said, he loved that we were fair. He didn’t love that our eyes were brown, but this, he remarked to the guard, could prove useful—he leaned in still closer to inspect us, extending a gloved hand to stroke my sister’s hair.
So you’re Pearl?
His hand dipped through her curls too easily, as if it had done so for years.
She’s not Pearl,
I said. I stepped forward to obscure my sister, but Mama pulled me away and told the doctor that, indeed, he had named the right girl.
So they like to play tricks?
He laughed. Tell me your secret— how do you know who is who?
Pearl doesn’t fidget
was all Mama would say. I was grateful that she didn’t elaborate on our identifiable differences. Pearl wore a blue pin in her hair. I wore red. Pearl spoke evenly. My speech was rushed, broken in spots, riddled with pause. Pearl’s skin was as pale as a dumpling. I had summer flesh, as spotty as a horse. Pearl was all girl. I wanted to be all Pearl, but try as I might, I could only be myself.
The doctor stooped to me so that we could be face to face.
Why would you lie?
he asked me. Again, there was his laugh, tinged with the familial.
If I was honest, I would have said that Pearl was—to my mind— the weaker of the two of us, and I thought I could protect her if I became her. Instead, I gave him a half-truth.
I forget which one I am sometimes,
I said lamely.
And this is where I don’t remember. This is where I want to wander my mind back and under, past the smell, past the thump- bump of the boots and the suitcases, toward some semblance of a good-bye. Because we should have seen our loves go missing, we should have been able to watch them leave us, should have known the precise moment of our loss. If only we’d seen their faces turning from us, a flash of eye, a curve of cheek! A face turning—they would never give us that. Still, why couldn’t we have had a view of their backs to carry with us, just their backs as they left, only that? Just a glimpse of shoulder, a flash of woolen coat? For the sight of Zayde’s hand, hanging so heavy at his side—for Mama’s braid, lifting in the wind!
But where our loved ones should have been, we had only the introduction to this white-coated man, Josef Mengele, the same Mengele who would become, in all his many years of hiding, Helmut Gregor, G. Helmuth, Fritz Ulmann, Fritz Hollman, Jose Mengele, Peter Hochbicler, Ernst Sebastian Alves, Jose Aspiazi, Lars Balltroem, Friedrich Edler von Breitenbach, Fritz Fischer, Karl Geuske, Ludwig Gregor, Stanislaus Prosky, Fausto Rindon, Fausto Rondon, Gregor Schklastro, Heinz Stobert, and Dr. Henrique Wollman.
The man who would bury his death-dealing within these many names—he told us to call him Uncle Doctor. He made us call him by this name, once, then twice, just so we could all be acquainted, with no mistakes. By the time we finished repeating the name to his satisfaction, our family had vanished.
And when we saw the absence where Mama and Zayde once stood, an awareness collapsed me at the knees, because I saw that this world was inventing a different order of living things. I did not know then what kind of living thing I would become, but the guard didn’t let me have a chance to think about it—he grasped my arm and dragged me till Pearl assured him that she’d support me, and she put her arm around my waist as we were led away with the triplets, away from the ramp and into the dust, onto a little road that led past the sauna and toward the crematoria, and as we marched into this new distance with death rising up on either side of us, we saw bodies on a cart, saw them heaped and blackened, and one of the bodies— it was reaching out its hand, it was grasping for something to hold, as if there were some invisible tether in the air that only the neardead could see. The body’s mouth moved. We saw the pinkness of a tongue as it flapped and struggled. Words had abandoned it.
I knew how important words were to a life. If I gave the body some of mine, I thought, it would be restored.
Was I stupid to think this? Or feebleminded? Would the thought have occurred to me in a place free of flame-licked winds and white-winged doctors?
These are fair questions. I think of them often, but I have never tried to answer them. The answers don’t belong to me.
All I know: I stared at the body, and the only words I could summon weren’t my own. They were from a song I’d heard played on a smuggled record player in our ghetto basement. Whenever I’d heard the song, it had improved me. So I gave these words a try.
‘Would you like to swing on a star?’
I sang to the body.
Not a sound, not a stir. Was it the fault of my squeaky voice? I tried again.
‘Carry moonbeams home in ajar?’
I sang.
It was pathetic of me to try, I know, but I had always believed in the world’s ability to right itself, just like that, with a single kindness. And when kindness is not around, you invent new orders and systems to believe in, and there, in that moment—whether it was stupidity or feeblemindedness—I believed in a body’s ability to animate itself with the breath of a word. But it was obvious that these lyrics were not the right words at all. None of them could unlock the life of the body or were powerful enough to repair it. I searched for another word, a good word, to give—there had to be a word, I was sure of it—but the guard wouldn’t let me finish. He pulled me away and forced us to press on, anxious to have us showered and processed and numbered so that our time in Mengele’s zoo could begin.
Auschwitz had been built to imprison Jews. Birkenau had been built to kill them with greater efficiency. Mere kilometers bridged their attached evils. What this zoo was designed for, I did not know—I could only swear that Pearl and I, we would never be caged.
The barracks of the Zoo were once stables for horses, but now they were heaped with the likes of us: twins, triplets, quints. Hundreds upon hundreds of us, all packed into beds that weren’t beds but matchboxes, little slots to slip bodies into; we were piled from floor to ceiling, forced into these minute structures three or four bodies at a time so that a girl hardly knew where her body ended and another’s began.
Everywhere we looked there was a duplicate, an identical. All girls. Sad girls, toddler girls, girls from faraway places, girls who could have been our neighborhood’s girls. Some of these girls were quiet; they posed like birds on their straw mattresses and studied us. As we walked past them on their perches, I saw the chosen, the ones selected to suffer in certain ways while their other halves remained untouched. In nearly every pair, one twin had a spine gone awry, a bad leg, a patched eye, a wound, a scar, a crutch.
When Pearl and I sat on our own bunk, the mobile ones descended on us. They scrambled over the rickety corrals with their straw mattresses and appraised our similarities. Demands of our identities were made.
We were from Lodz, we told them. First, a house. Then, a basement in the ghetto. We had a grandpapa, a mother. Once, there had been a father. And Zayde had an old spaniel that could play dead when you pointed a finger at him, but he was easily brought back to life. Did we mention that our father was a doctor who helped others so much that he disappeared one night, that he left us to tend to a sick child and never returned? Yes, we missed him so much we could not even divide the weight of our grief between us. There were other things we dreaded too: germs, unhappy endings, Mama weeping. And there were things we loved: pianos, Judy Garland, Mama weeping less. But who were we really, in the end? There wasn’t much to say beyond the fact that one of us was a good dancer, and the other one tried to be good but wasn’t really good at anything except being curious. That one was me.
Satisfied by this information, the others offered their own in a clamor of sentence-finishing.
We get more food here,
began Rachel, a girl so pale that you could nearly see through her.
But it’s not kosher and it eats your insides,
her equally transparent half pointed out.
We keep our hair,
noted Sharon, pulling on her braid for show.
Until the lice come,
added her shorn sister.
We get to keep our clothes too,
contributed one of the Russians.
But they put crosses on our backs,
finished her double. She turned so I could see the cross that blared in red paint on her dress, but I needed no illustration. A red cross stood between my shoulder blades too.
The children hushed abruptly, and the uninvited silence hung over us all—it was as if a new cloud had installed itself within the rafters of the Zoo. The many doubles looked at each other searchingly—there had to be something, their faces said, something more than food and hair and clothes. Then a voice piped up from the bunk below us. We craned to see the speaker, but she and her twin were curled up together, flush with the brick wall. We never came to know her face, but her words stayed with us always.
They keep our families safe for us,
said this unseen stranger.
At this, all the girls nodded their approval, and Pearl and I were overwhelmed by a new rush of conversation as everyone congratulated one another on belonging to families who would remain intact, unlike so many.
I didn’t want to ask the obvious. So I pinched Pearl to make her ask for us.
Why are we more important than the others?
Her voice shrank as it approached the end of the question.
A flurry of answers rose, all having something to do with purpose and greatness, with purity and beauty and being of use. We didn’t hear a single one that made sense.
And before I could even try to understand this concept, the blokowa assigned to look after us entered. Behind her prodigious back, we called this person Ox; she had the appearance of a wardrobe with a toupee and tended toward foot-stamping and nostril-flaring when caught in one of her passionate rants, which our supposed disobedience frequently inspired. When Pearl and I were first introduced to her, however, she was just a figure popping her head in at the door, half shrouded in night and offended by our questions.
Why are we called the Zoo?
I asked. Who decided this?
Ox shrugged. It is not obvious to you?
I said that it was not. The zoos we’d read about with Zayde were sites of preservation that presented the vastness of life. This place, it cared only for the sinister act of collection.
It is a name that pleases Dr. Mengele
was all Ox would say. You won’t find many answers here. But sleep! That’s something you can have. Now let me have mine!
If only we could have slept. But the darkness was darker than any I’d known, and the smell clung within my nostrils. A moan drifted from the bunk below, and outside there was the barking of dogs, and my stomach wouldn’t stop growling back at them. I tried to amuse myself by playing one of our word games, but the shouts of the guards outside kept overpowering my alphabet. I tried to make Pearl play a game with me, but Pearl was busy tracing her fingertips over the silver web that embroidered our brick corner, the better to ignore my whispered questions.
Would you rather be a watch that only knows the good times,
I asked her, or a watch that sings?
I don’t believe in music anymore.
Me neither. But would you rather be a watch—
Why do I have to be a watch at all? Is this my only choice?
I wanted to argue that sometimes, as living things, as human-type people who were presumably still alive, we had to treat ourselves as objects in order to get by; we had to hide ourselves away and seek repair only when repair was safe to seek. But I chose to press on with another query instead.
Would you rather be the key to a place that will save us or the weapon that will destroy our enemies?
I’d rather be a real girl,
Pearl said dully. Like I used to be.
I wanted to argue that playing games would help her feel like a real girl again, but even I wasn’t sure of this fact. The numbers the Nazis had given us had made life unrecognizable, and in the dark, the numbers were all I could see, and what was worse was that there was no way to pretend them into anything less enduring or severe or blue. Mine were smudged and bleared—I’d kicked and spat; they’d had to hold me down—but they were numbers still. Pearl was numbered too, and I hated her numbers even more than mine, because they pointed out that we were separate people, and when you are separate people, you might be parted.
I told Pearl that I’d tattoo us back to sameness as soon as possible, but she only sighed the sigh traditional to moments of sisterly frustration.
Enough with the stories. You can’t tattoo.
I told her that I knew how to well enough. A sailor taught me, back in Gdańsk. I’d inked an anchor onto his left biceps.
True, it was a lie. Or a half-lie, since I had seen such an anchor- inking take place. When we’d summered at the sea, I spent my time peering into the gray recess of a tattoo parlor, its walls bordered with outlines of swallows and ships, while Pearl found a boy to hold her hand near the barnacled prow of a boat. So it was that as my sister entered into the secrecies of flesh on flesh, the pang of a palm curled within one’s own, I schooled myself in the intimacies of needles, the plunge of a point so fine that only a dream could light upon its tip.
I’ll make us the same again someday,
I insisted. I just need a needle and some ink. There must be a way to get that, given that we are special here.
Pearl scowled and made a big show of turning her back to me— the bunk cried out with a creak—and her elbow flew up and jabbed me in the ribs. It was an accident—Pearl would never hurt me on purpose, if only because it would hurt her too. That was one of the biggest stings of this sisterhood—pain never belonged to just one of us. We had no choice but to share our sufferings, and I knew that in this place we’d have to find a way to divide the pain before it began to multiply.
As I realized this, a girl on the other side of the room found a light, a precious book of matches, and she decided that this scarcity would be best put to use making shadow puppets for the audience of multiples. And so it was that we drifted off to sleep with a series of shadow figures crossing the wall, walking two by two, each flanking the other, as if in a procession toward some unseen ark that might secure their safety.
So much world in the shadows there! The figures feathered and crept and crawled toward the ark. Not a single life was too small. The leech asserted itself, the centipede sauntered, the cricket sang by. Representatives of the swamp, the mountain, the desert—all of them ducked and squiggled and forayed in shadow. I classified them, two by two, and the neatness of my ability to do so gave me comfort. But as their journey lengthened, and the flames began to dim, the shadows were visited by distortions. Humps rose on their backs, and their limbs scattered and their spines dissolved. They became changed and monstrous. They couldn’t recognize themselves.
Still, for as long as the light lived, the shadows endured. That was something, wasn’t it?
PEARL
CHAPTER TWO
Zugangen, or Newcomers
Stasha didn’t know it, but always, from the very beginning, we were more than we. I was older by only ten minutes, but it was enough to teach me how different we were.
It was only in Mengele’s Zoo that we became too different.
For example: On that first night, the marching shadows comforted Stasha, but I could find no peace in them. Because those matches illuminated another sight, one accompanied by a death rattle. Did Stasha mention the