- The Island on Bird Street
infobox Book |
name = The Island on Bird Street
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption =
author =Uri Orlev
cover_artist =
country =
language = English
series =
genre = Children's literature
publisher =
release_date = 1985
media_type = Print (Paperback )
pages =
isbn = ISBN 0395338875
preceded_by =
followed_by ="The Island on Bird Street" (ISBN 0395338875) is a 1985 semi-autobiographical children's book by
Israeli authorUri Orlev , which tells the story of a young boy, Alex, and his struggle to survive alone in aghetto duringWorld War II . The author received the 1996Hans Christian Andersen Award for children's literature, largely for this book, which was translated into numerous languages and adapted into a play and a film (the story was originally written inHebrew ).Plot Summary
In the book, Alex, a
Jewish boy, hides in the ruins of a house in the ghetto after its inhabitants have been forced out by theGermans , leaving all their possessions behind. His father was taken by the Germans, and he is sent to no.78 Bird Street until his father is able to find him him. He meets a girl named Stashya and grows so fond of her that he secretly visits thePolish side to go out on "dates" with her.They go ice skating for their first date. He soon finds out that just like him, she is Jewish, but unlike him she is hiding it and pretending to be Polish. Alex and Stashya communicate between themselves using a modified version ofMorse Code . After five months, Alex's father comes to rescue him.Although the ghetto Alex stays in resembles the
Warsaw Ghetto , where Orlev himself lived during much of the war, Orlev states in the introduction that Alex's ghetto is fictional.
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