The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman

by Andrzej Szczypiorski

Paperback, 1996

Status

Available

Publication

Phoenix (1996), Edition: New edition, 208 pages

Description

In the Nazi-occupied Warsaw of 1943, Irma Seidenman, a young Jewish widow, possesses two attributes that can spell the difference between life and death: she has blue eyes and blond hair. With these, and a set of false papers, she has slipped out of the ghetto, passing as the wife of a Polish officer, until one day an informer spots her on the street and drags her off to the Gestapo. At times a dark lament, at others a sly and sardonic thriller, The Beautiful Mrs. Seidenman is the story of the thirty-six hours that follow Irma's arrest and the events that lead to her dramatic rescue as the last of Warsaw's Jews are about to meet their deaths in the burning ghetto.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Kristelh
A story of Poland told through several stories of people who are living in Warsaw, Poland and generally is set in WWII though it does span over several years and into more modern times. Poland is made up of many peoples who have identity with Poland; the Polish, the German, the Jewish and Russians.
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The characters were all intimately presented and we get to know their inner thoughts and how others see them. The author gave each person their unique voice but also was able to speak through his characters to give the reader insight into Poland.

OPENING LINE: The room was in twilight because the judge was a lover of twilight.

QUOTES:
But God is merciful to those who seek Him, even if they search for him in such peculiar circumstances, amid the world's filth and indignities. Pg 30

Christians considered themselves superior,perhaps precisely because although being in the minority, they nevertheless felt themselves to be favored by the world. Pg 86

The sky always seemed to him dirty. Pg152

What has become of our freedom if we cannot be ourselves? 160

They took away the right to be herself, the right to self-determination. 192

WORDS:
Xenophobic; fear of foreigners
Semitophile; lover of Jewish people and culture
Philologist; humanist specializing in classical scholarship

******CLOSING LINE: But it's possible that she would have felt the same sense of relief at bringing into the world a son.

RATING: excellent
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LibraryThing member meggyweg
Meh. This book presents many very intriguing characters, but the author seems so wrapped up in his own ideas about Poles and the future of Poland that he seems to forget he is supposed to be telling a story here. There is no story. There is no suspense.

You already know from the beginning that Mrs.
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Seidenman will be rescued, because it says so on the dust jacket. (And, contrary to what the dust jacket says, the rescue was not "dramatic." Her friends simply got a German man to go to the jail and say he knows her and she's not a Jew.) You already know she will survive the war and live to an old age. In fact, you already know the fate of every single character in the story before long, because whenever one is introduced the author immediately tells you what their life will be like later and how and when they will die.

Most of the book consists of various people from all walks of life, all connected in some way with Mrs. Seidenman, giving speeches. These are either internal or external monologues and they go on for pages. And much of this is interesting, even profound, but the fact is that while the characters are standing around philosophizing, nothing is happening and there is no plot to speak of.

This book is good, perhaps, if you want to want know the history and social climate of Warsaw in 1943, but it is a piss-poor excuse for a novel.
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LibraryThing member NadineC.Keels
Tragically lovely. This book left me pretty speechless.
LibraryThing member Dreesie
An excellent novel that looks at Poland (Warsaw) and the Polish during the German occupation of Poland during WWII.

The story is based around the blond and blue-eyed Jewish widow Mrs Seidenman, now known as Mrs Gromowski (sp?), a Polish officer's widow. Someone informs on her, and her community
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comes through to save her. Though this is the framework for the novel, each chapter looks at a different person living in Warsaw at the time--from Mrs S-G (as she goes by after the war, living in Paris), to Pawel (a teen who plays a part in her rescue), to her academic next door neighbor Mr Korba (who sets the ball rolling, and has no idea that she actually is Jewish), to a street criminal. We also meet a long-time pro-Poland fighter in the Underground who has been fighting for an independent Poland since 1905, Pawel's best friend Henio (and his father and 4-yo sister, who is smuggled from the ghetto to a convent, where she is converted to Catholicism to save her), to Johann (Jíçs) Mí_ller (a German who has lived in Poland his entire life, and plays the key role in saving Mrs Seidenman).

It can get a bit confusing with multiple nicknames and aliases, but you get a real feel for the community that existed under occupation. During WWI, Poland was occupied by the Russians, and you see the fear from those events effecting some of the characters' actions. You see the confusion over what the Germans are doing to their Jewish friends and neighbors, and anyone who crosses the paths of the wrong German occupier.
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LibraryThing member Gypsy_Boy
It took me longer than I anticipated to become as fully immersed in this work as in the first book of his that I read, A Mass for Arras (reviewed here). But when I did I came away enormously impressed—again—with this author, a Polish Catholic who writes about Jewish/Polish relations. A man who
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took part in the Warsaw Uprising in WWII, was imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp, was an activist for Solidarity, and was imprisoned by the Polish Communist government, and who—it appeared after his death—may have collaborated with the secret police under Stalin. The book tells of the arrest and brief imprisonment of the title character. Each chapter examines in detail the life of one of the various people—Pole, Jew, Nazi, Catholic nun, and others—who had a role in her release. The stories are vividly told, occasionally philosophical, and always deeply moving. An exceptional work, highly recommended.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1986

ISBN

185799499X / 9781857994995
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