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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
46,791 global ratings
5 star
74%
4 star
19%
3 star
4%
2 star
2%
1 star
1%
The Tattooist of Auschwitz

The Tattooist of Auschwitz

byHeather Morris
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clare burns
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 starsSurvival through strength of spirit
Reviewed in Australia on 30 January 2019
A harrowing and yet inspirational tale of one couples survival of the concentration camps. A testimony to the strength of the will to survive, Lale simply decides he will not perish under the Nazi regime. When Gita is ready to give into despair it's his will alone that pulls them through to a life after WW2. The Tattooist quietly saves many under the watchful eye of his captors, gathering supporters, friends and lives as he goes. His soul cries for those who are gone all while he continues to survive is a place of pure death. Having had the somber priviledge to visit Auschwitz myself, I walk through Lale's daily life in camp with him and am amazed that anyone; let alone this sensitive young man, survived the place of ultimate death.

A story that should be read by all - and I'm proud that my country, my city welcomed this couple to create a 2nd life under the Aussie skies far away from the horrors and ghosts of their past.
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7 people found this helpful

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Polka Dots
2.0 out of 5 starsA hard book to rate
Reviewed in Australia on 24 November 2021
I really wanted to give The Tattooist of Auschwitz 5 stars because stories like Lale’s and Gita’s and every Holocaust survivor must be known and never forgotten. This book it’s full of inaccuracies and factual errors.

I believe that everyone working on a book about such an important historical event has a responsibility to be as accurate as possible, even when writing fiction.

Unfortunately even if I liked to read about Lale’s and Gita’s story I can’t give it more than 2 stars.
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From Australia

clare burns
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Survival through strength of spirit
Reviewed in Australia on 30 January 2019
Verified Purchase
A harrowing and yet inspirational tale of one couples survival of the concentration camps. A testimony to the strength of the will to survive, Lale simply decides he will not perish under the Nazi regime. When Gita is ready to give into despair it's his will alone that pulls them through to a life after WW2. The Tattooist quietly saves many under the watchful eye of his captors, gathering supporters, friends and lives as he goes. His soul cries for those who are gone all while he continues to survive is a place of pure death. Having had the somber priviledge to visit Auschwitz myself, I walk through Lale's daily life in camp with him and am amazed that anyone; let alone this sensitive young man, survived the place of ultimate death.

A story that should be read by all - and I'm proud that my country, my city welcomed this couple to create a 2nd life under the Aussie skies far away from the horrors and ghosts of their past.
7 people found this helpful
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Amazon Customer TE
4.0 out of 5 stars Hope triumphs over despair.
Reviewed in Australia on 6 April 2018
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As time passes people tend to forget the enormity of the holocaust and this book attempts to remind all of us just how dreadful it was for millions of Jews and others victimised by the Nazis. This story is told simply, with an undertone of hope and courage which at times understates the conditions suffered by those in the concentratiom camps. Maybe this is a strength because it avoids sensationalism, but maybe it is a weakness too, because it leaves gaps in the narrative which deserved more detail.
Such as the lack of informatiom as to what happened to Lale's mentor whose wisdom and compassion led him to become the Tattoist and thus saved his life? And why are readers not told about what happens to women who were forced to become the lovers of the German officers , useful at times, but abandoned afer the war , classified as collaborators, and sentenced to years in gaol by the victors. There is a disconnect between the protagonist's
desire to survive and his avowed love for his future wife.
He seems to have blocked out the emotonal indebtedness he owed to others.
It could be that T .S. Eliot was right , "Human beings csnnot stand too much reaity". Even so , if we don't demand the ugly truth about man's inhumanity to man it will surely be repeated. This book is revommended for senior school children and above.
4 people found this helpful
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Margaret Blades
5.0 out of 5 stars The Tatooist of Auschwitz
Reviewed in Australia on 2 February 2018
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Having visited Auschwitz and Birkenau, I will never forget the sense of hopelessness I felt as I walked through the entrance gates. This sense returned as I read this book ,knowing that what I read had occurred. It is incredible that such acts of depravity were of daily occurrence and accepted as the norm at that time.This book recounts the life of an inmate,forced to do a job which he finds repulsive but the desire to stay alive one more day is paramount.The brutality of his existence is tempered with the falling in love with a fellow inmate. This true story keeps the reader in suspense to find out if they survive this hell hole . Whilst not warm and fuzzy, this book needs to be read. A tablet in Auschwitz states “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it “. Lest we forget!
9 people found this helpful
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EllaDee
5.0 out of 5 stars A gentle touch.
Reviewed in Australia on 7 December 2021
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A promise kept... Lale's story is out in the world. A story that is worthy of a screenplay, the author's first choice but the memoir gives it a personal touch, via which the reader is drawn into the connection between the writer and subject, and steps into the journey alongside Lale, accompanying him so very closely to the events he recounts, too close to the horror. Such trauma should be unimaginable and unspeakable but courage and tenacity infuse the words Heather and Lale together employ with the power of a kernel of the impossible justice that is merited by telling the truth of it... complementing the terrible number of other truths and accounts that must be acknowledged again and again to guard against complacency and recurrence of the unthinkable.
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Michael Chiller
5.0 out of 5 stars Sobering but uplifting
Reviewed in Australia on 2 March 2018
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The book was very well written and it was easy to read. The content was a little harder to read given the horrors experienced by the inmates. Such stories need to be recorded to negate those who would deny that such horrors took place. Millions of people died and many survived with horrible scars because of the atrocities. That love rose from the horrors shows that mankind is better than what happened here. We must never forget! Thanks for sharing this story with us all.
3 people found this helpful
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malbrown2
4.0 out of 5 stars but was it a good book? Not really
Reviewed in Australia on 7 June 2018
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The Tattooist of Auschwitz was written well, it’s an important story to tell, document and was interesting, but was it a good book ?
Not really, I didn’t enjoy it.

I’m nearly 60 and all my life I have heard about, seen on documentaries and read about the holocaust of WW2. I’m afraid to say, I’m almost immuned from feeling anything about this period in our history. Especially as programs like Hogan Heroes are still on free to air TV. But sometimes, I read an article or see something on TV that catches my attention.

The Narrow Road to the Deep North was something that stopped me in my tracks. My God Father, (Lloyd) was a captive in Changi during W2 and he would tell me stories of what happened to him in Changi when I was a child. The stories were no doubt modified for my sake but The Narrow Road to the Deep North was disturbing. I couldn’t bare to think about Lloyd and what he experienced.

And now the Tattooist of Auschwitz has again affected my immunization. Heather Morris has done well to portray the events of the Tatowierer. The death and torture of people is so brutal it’s hard to believe it happened. The discrimination is shocking and the disregard to fellow humans reads like fictional movie. But it is true and the Tatowierer lived in Melbourne. That’s remarkable and it’s hard to believe he and his brave wife could sleep at night.

I did recommend the Tattooist of Auschwitz to a friend and she has read it.

Malcolm Brown
4 people found this helpful
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Kylie Di Mauro
4.0 out of 5 stars Great, easy read
Reviewed in Australia on 17 December 2019
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Having read a lot of books on the atrocities of concentration camps, I initially found this book a little too simple. I felt the author skipped over the inhumanity of the camps, making it sound less traumatic. However I can now appreciate the author was telling someone’s story of survival and love many decades after the events in a short, easy to read novel format.

This is a story of true love and survival. The end made me cry because they lived to tell their story of forgiveness and love. They didn’t let their life be ruled by what people did to them, instead they were fighters who found the strength to go on to live a full, rich life.
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Mez21
5.0 out of 5 stars Riveting!!!
Reviewed in Australia on 25 January 2022
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This is an incredible story of one man's journey through what we now know as some of the most horrific and tragic events in human history. Lale's perspective on life, love and survival is, simply put, inspirational. His sheer strength and wisdom at such a young age, combined with his tenacity and fearlessness literally have me goosebumps. I've heard of page turners, this love story however is more than that. It's compelling and worth losing hours of sleep just to get through the book in one night!!
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Dylan
5.0 out of 5 stars The power of love
Reviewed in Australia on 11 May 2018
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I gave this book 5 stars because it is a true record and is told without embellishment. Beautifully written this is the story of Lale and Gita who were survivors of the worst atrocities in history. Their love and faith in one another enabled them to endure horrific suffering for 3 years in a Nazi concentration camp and to emerge triumphant.

The writing is eloquent and never descends into melodrama, even when recounting the near death experiences which confront both Lale and Gita.
3 people found this helpful
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Susan Burrell
5.0 out of 5 stars Lest we forget - many Holocaust stories have been written, all are important.
Reviewed in Australia on 4 February 2020
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As always, the stories of Holocaust survivors are harrowing, the evil inflicted in the concentration camps so horrendous as to defy understanding . Yet the telling is essential, as is our role as readers to be ‘honorable witnesses’ to the suffering they so stoically endured. To read that Cilka was sentenced to 15 years hard labor for ‘collaboration’ beggars belief. And Lale’s efforts, and other’s to survive - how can any of us who have not entered those gates of the damned dare to pass judgement. His efforts and kindness kept many people alive?
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