Category
page 1Personal accounts of the Holocaust

Maus
Maus, often published as '''''Maus: A Survivor's Tale''', is a graphic novel by American cartoonist Art Spiegelman, serialized from 1980 to 1991. It depicts Spiegelman interviewing his father about his experiences as a Polish Jew and Holocaust survivor. The work employs postmodern techniques, and represents Jews as mice, Germans as cats and Poles as pigs. Critics have classified Maus'' as memoir, biography, history, fiction, autobiography, or a mix of genres. In 1992, it became the first graphic novel to win a Pulitzer Prize.

Man's Search for Meaning
1946 essay by Viktor Frankl
If This Is a Man
memoir by Primo Levi

Night
1956 memoir by Elie Wiesel
Fatelessness
Fateless or Fatelessness (, ) is a novel by Imre Kertész, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize for literature, written between 1960 and 1973 and first published in 1975.
The Pianist
1946 memoir by Władysław Szpilman

One Survivor Remembers
1995 film by Kary Antholis
Ephraim Oshry
Lithuanian-born American rabbi and Holocaust survivor (1914-2003)

The Truce
1963 novel by Primo Levi

Smoke Over Birkenau
autobiographical work by Seweryna Szmaglewska
Sara Zyskind
Israeli writer

The Drowned and the Saved
essay by Primo Levi