Rosie Whitehouse, a journalist, writes about Holocaust survivors for BBC Online, the Observer, Tablet magazine, The Jewish Chronicle and Haaretz. She is the author of The People on the Beach (also published by Hurst), and the Bradt guide to Europe's Holocaust memorials, museums and sites.
'[A] heartrending account... This makes a well-covered historical period feel agonisingly immediate.' -- <b><I>Publishers Weekly</I></b> 'A compelling account of survival and remembrance.' -- <b><I>Booklist</I></b> ‘Rosie Whitehouse’s gripping narrative begins with a poignant portrait of a family torn apart, but soon broadens into searing questions of dispossession and betrayal that haunt European politics to this day. In illuminating the unyielding spirit of those who dared to defy oppression, Whitehouse masterfully renders the enduring light of human courage against the encroaching shadows of tyranny.’ * <b>Benjamin Balint, author of <i>Bruno Schulz</i>, winner of a National Jewish Book Award</b> * ‘British journalist Tim Judah was six years old when he asked his mother Marion why she didn’t have a mother. Two Sisters, written by the journalist Rosie Whitehouse (and Tim Judah’s wife) answers that question in a story that reads like a thriller: a family running from the Nazis and their religion, hoping they would find safety in France. Brilliantly researched and beautifully written, Two Sisters tells the story of the Holocaust in France through a family caught in the maelstrom.’ * <b>Edward Serotta, journalist, photographer and filmmaker and Founding Director of Centropa </b> * ‘Two Sisters is a brilliant meditation on family and trauma across generations, a much-needed critical reappraisal of the Jewish experience in France during the Holocaust, and a reminder of just how complicated and nuanced individual stories can be—even, and perhaps especially, the stories of those we feel we know so well.’ * <b>James McAuley, author of <i>The House of Fragile Things</i></b> *