We know a bit about the Warsaw Ghetto, and the walling up of Jewish citizens during the war. We know a little...but this book forces us to SEE. To watch children slowly starve to death, to see families crammed into one room, to see people rounded up and taken away, never to return.
I didn't know much about the Warsaw Uprising, the short-lived, heroic, revolt by young Jewish kids who decided a death fighting for their cause meant more than a slow death by starvation or a fast execution.
Told through the eyes of a fictional Jewish boy, we learn about the real hero of the uprising, young Mordechai Anielewicz, the spiritual leader of this doomed endeavor.
I remember reading THE PIANIST, but I don't remember anything about the uprising in that book...
My only complaint is the book was too short, with a story that was too surface. I will now dig for more information.