As Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel writs, Gypsies “are scarcely mentioned in the so-called literature of the Holocaust. An outrageous injustice—but this hauntingly intense novel will surely right this wrong…I urge you to read the story of this Jewish Gypsy…if only to deepen your awareness of your own.” The Eighth Sin is a searing, unforgettable first-person novel about a Gypsy survivor of the Nazi death camps, brought to New York City by Jews who try to understand and repair the damage done to his soul. Once you begin reading this account, you will find it very difficult to stop.
As Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel writs, Gypsies “are scarcely mentioned in the so-called literature of the Holocaust. An outrageous injustice—but this hauntingly intense novel will surely right this wrong…I urge you to read the story of this Jewish Gypsy…if only to deepen your awareness of your own.” The Eighth Sin is a searing, unforgettable first-person novel about a Gypsy survivor of the Nazi death camps, brought to New York City by Jews who try to understand and repair the damage done to his soul. Once you begin reading this account, you will find it very difficult to stop.