The Zookeeper’s Wife

Amazon.com Price: $17.37 (as of 10/11/2019 22:50 PST- Details)

Description

[Read by Suzanne Toren]

Combining historical sources with the diary of Antonina Zabinski, Diane Ackerman recreates the story of the Polish circle of relatives who defied the Nazi regime to shelter, refugees, resistance, and animals.

Jan and Antonina Zabinski were Polish Christian zookeepers horrified by Nazi racism, who managed to save over three hundred people. Yet their story has fallen between the seams of history.

Drawing on Antonina’s diary and other historical sources, bestselling naturalist Diane Ackerman vividly re-creates Antonina’s life as ”the zookeeper’s wife,” chargeable for her own circle of relatives, the zoo animals, and their ”guests”: resistance activists and refugee Jews, many of whom Jan had smuggled from the Warsaw Ghetto.

Jan led a cell of saboteurs, and the Zabinski’s young son risked his life carrying food to the guests, at the same time as also tending to an eccentric array of creatures in the house (pigs, hare, muskrat, foxes, and more). With hidden people having animal names, and pet animals having human names, it is a small wonder the zoo’s code name became ”The House under a Crazy Star.” Yet there is more to this story than a colorful cast. With her exquisite sensitivity to the flora and fauna, Ackerman explores the role of nature in both kindness and savagery, and she unravels the fascinating and disturbing obsession at the core of Nazism: both a worship of nature and its violation, as humans sought to keep an eye on the genome of all of the planet.


Amazon Significant Seven, September 2007: On the heels of Alan Weisman’s The World Without Us I picked up Diane Ackerman’s The Zookeeper’s Wife. Both books take you to Poland’s forest primeval, the Bialowieza, and paint a richly textured portrait of a flora and fauna that few of us would recognize. The similarities end there, then again, as Ackerman explores how that sense of natural order imploded under the Nazi occupation of Poland. Jan and Antonina Zabiniski–keepers of the Warsaw Zoo who sheltered Jews from the Warsaw ghetto–serve as Ackerman’s lens to this moment in time, and she weaves their experiences and reflections so seamlessly into the story that it might be easy to read the book as Antonina’s own miraculous memoir. Jan and Antonina’s passion for life in all its diversity illustrates ever more powerfully just how narrow the Nazi worldview was once, and what tragedy it wreaked. The Zookeeper’s Wife is a powerful testament to their courage and–like Irene Nemirovsky’s Suite Francaise–brings this period of European history into intimate view. –Anne Bartholomew

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