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Uncompromisingly frank, "both brutal and beautifully written" (The
Boston Globe), The Cap is an unconventional Holocaust memoir that
defies all moral judgment and ventures into a soul blackened by the
unforgiving cruelty of its surroundings. Roman Frister's memoir of
his life before, during, and after his imprisonment in the Nazi
concentration camps sparked enormous controversy and became an
international best-seller. With bone-chilling candor, Frister
illustrates how the impulse to live unhinges our comfortable
notions of morality, blurring the boundary between victim and
oppressor and leaving absolutely no room for martyrdom. By the time
Roman Frister was sixteen, he had watched his mother murdered by an
SS officer and he had waited for his father to expire, eager to
retrieve a hidden half loaf of bread from beneath the dying man's
cot. When confronted with certain death, he placed another inmate
in harm's way to save himself. Frister's resilience and instinct
for self-preservation -- developed in the camps -- become the
source of his life's successes and failures. Chilling and
unsentimental, The Cap is a rare and unadorned self-portrait of a
man willing to show all of his scars. Reflected in stark relief are
the indelible wounds of all twentieth-century European Jews. An
exceptional and groundbreaking testimony, Roman Frister's
"gut-wrenching memoir is a must-read." -- Kirkus Reviews
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