Blog

September 4: Read All About It!

Today, September 4, is a special day on the calendar: It’s National Newspaper Carrier Day. Several months ago, I posted a blog which related my own experience as a paperboy (The Cinnamon Cruller).  That blog generated more feedback from my readers than any other blog I’ve written over the years.  Who knew there were so …

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Steinbeck Article Published

MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History has just recently published an article I wrote about John Steinbeck and his World War II novel, The Moon Is Down.  I have previously written (here) about the number of parallels between Steinbeck and Odd Nansen. The article, entitled “Piéce De Résistance,” describes Steinbeck’s transition from successful novelist …

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In Memoriam: Odd Nansen (12/6/01–6/27/73)

Odd Nansen died forty-nine years ago today, age 71. The anniversary of his death always seems like an appropriate time for remembrance and reflection. (See my previous observations on this date in 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017 and 2016). Recently I finished reading No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World …

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The Saga of U-505 (Part II)

When we last left U-505 (here), it was being towed by the U.S. Navy to Bermuda, the first enemy ship to be captured on the high seas since the War of 1812 (which, incidentally, began 210 years yesterday). During the War The capture of U-505, far from being widely publicized, was kept in the strictest …

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Today is Anne Frank’s Birthday

Today is Anne Frank’s birthday.  Had she lived, she would be 93 years old.  The exact date and cause of her death are unknown, although it is now believed that she succumbed in late February, 1945, probably to a disease such as typhus. Anne, her family, and the other inhabitants of the secret annex in …

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June 4, 1944: U-505 Captured

On this date in 1944, U.S. Naval Task Group 22.3 captured German U-boat U-505 on the high seas near the Cape Verde Islands.  It was the first successful capture by the Navy of an enemy ship on the high seas since the War of 1812. I first became aware of U-505 while doing research on …

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Yom HaShoah: Holocaust Remembrance Day

Today marks Yom HaShoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day.  We vow never to forget, and never to let it happen again. Today also happens to be the 77th anniversary of the final entry in Odd Nansen’s diary, From Day to Day: “What on earth am I to write?  It’s as impossible today as on all the …

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“There are things worse than war.”

So wrote Odd Nansen in his diary entry dated April 3, 1942, eighty years ago today. Nansen had just finished describing in his diary an episode where 50 men, ordered to report in their civilian clothes, think they are about to be released (as an Easter gift), only to learn at the last moment that …

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Two Holocaust Survivors Reunite 79 Years Later

It isn’t often that one gets to write the words “heart-warming” and “Sachsenhausen” in the same sentence, but here’s a rare occasion: a reunion by two 97-year-old Holocaust survivors who lost track of each other back in 1943, but reunited for the first time–by accident no less–recently.  Click here for the full story. A heart-warming …

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In Memoriam: Marit Greve (11/8/28–3/26/21)

One year ago today I lost a dear friend when Marit Greve, Odd Nansen’s eldest child, passed away in her sleep, age 92.  Marit was a such a delightful person.  Quite apart from the immense help she provided me while I was editing Odd Nansen’s WWII concentration camp diary, the Marit I came to know …

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From Day to Day: One Man’s Diary of Survival in Nazi Concentration Camps

Hailed by The New Yorker as “among the most compelling documents to come out of the war,” From Day to Day is a World War II concentration camp diary—one of only a handful ever translated into English—secretly written by Odd Nansen, a Norwegian political prisoner. Arrested in January 1942, Nansen, son of polar explorer and humanitarian Fridtjof Nansen (Nobel Peace Prize 1922) was held captive for the duration of the war in various Nazi camps in Norway and Germany.

Nansen’s diary entries detail his palpable longing for his wife and family, his constantly frustrated hopes for release, the quiet strength and sometimes ugly prejudices of his fellow prisoners, and his horror at the especially barbaric treatment reserved for the Jews. The diary brilliantly illuminates Nansen’s daily struggle, not only to survive, but to preserve his sanity and maintain his humanity in a world engulfed by fear and hate.

First published in English in 1949, From Day to Day had been out of print for almost seventy years. The new edition contains entries and sketches never previously available in English. It also features a new introduction and extensive annotations by Timothy Boyce and a preface by Thomas Buergenthal, whose life (as a ten year-old) Nansen saved while in Sachsenhausen, later recounted in his own memoir A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy.