- Published: 6 September 2012
- ISBN: 9781448156788
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 384
A Train in Winter
A Story of Resistance, Friendship and Survival in Auschwitz
- Published: 6 September 2012
- ISBN: 9781448156788
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 384
A boom which contains a wealth of historical information as well as some brilliant if horrific storytelling
John Laughland, Spectator
A harrowing but also uplifting shared story of friendship, courage and endurance
Independent
A harrowing but also uplifting story of shared story of friendship, courage and endurance
Boyd Tonkin, Independent, Books of the Year
A hybrid of history and multiple biography, movingly chronicles the women's ordeal... [it] bears eloquent witness to the moral and material ruin of collaborationist in France
Ian Thomson, Seven
A multiple biography and a detailed anatomy of the nature of friendship... A Train in Winter is a powerful and moving book; its significance is in bringing to a wider, non-French readership the particular and terrible fate of a group of women whose only crime was to love their country and to wish to do something to defend it, at a time when its government chose craven obedience to the occupier, with terrible consequences for so many of its people
Natasha Lehrer, Times Literary Supplement
A pitch-perfect study of human depravity, and of the heroism it can inspire
Maggie Fergusson, Intelligent Life
A remarkable achievement of biographical and oral research and with a brilliant narrative and description
History Today
A remarkable and deeply affecting book
Oxford Times
A story of stunning courage, generosity and hope. They risked their lives to defeat Fascism, by printing subversive literature, hiding Jewish friends or, in the case of one girl, simply insulting a French youth because he had decided to co-operate with the Nazis. The price they paid for their bravery was terrible. A Train in Winter could have been a sad, almost morbid book. In Moorehead's expert hands it is a triumphant one
Kathryn Hughes, Mail on Sunday
An outstanding and important book, compelling and deeply troubling
Peter Eade, Country Life
Compassionate, meticulous and compulsively enthralling... This book is essential reading. The litany of names at the end, with their brief biographies (Yolande, Cecile, Poupette, Mitzy, Lucie...) reminds us weeping is not enough. It bears witness - and warns
Bel Mooney, Daily Mail
It is an exceptional achievement on the author's part to have reconstructed these obscure lives that so often ended in sordid misery and to have restored their dignity and honour
Patrick Marnham, Literary Review
Moorehead tells her appalling story in measured prose that sets off perfectly the reader's growing sense of wonder that such heroism is possible
Guardian
This is a clear-sighted, distressing and unforgettable book
Stephanie Cross, The Lady
This serious and heartfelt book does deliver on its promise of a tale of how female friendship "can make the difference between living and dying"... Profound
Brian Schofield, Sunday Times
With A Train in Winter [Caroline Moorehead] has managed to pay tribute and tell the women's compelling story'
Scotsman