'On a winter's day in 1943, 22-year-old Mischka Danos chanced on a terrible sight as he skied through Latvian woods—a pit filled with the bodies of Jews killed by the occupying Germans. The world was full of such atrocities, which makes Mischka's decision to escape conscription to the Waffen-SS by going on a student exchange to Germany all the more remarkable. Even more so when Mischka later discovered he was part-Jewish.
'But his was no ordinary life. He narrowly escaped death in the Allied fire bombing of Dresden. He then lived the precarious life of a Displaced Person in occupied Germany before heading north with the hope of crossing the border into Denmark, where he finally reunited with his mother Olga. He went on to become a member of the exceptional Heidelberg school of physics. They were both resettled in the US at the beginning of the 1950s, which is where, much later, he met, fell in love with and married Sheila Fitzpatrick.
'Fitzpatrick pieces together her late husband's story through diaries, correspondence and recollections: 'This is a historian's book but it's also a wife's book about her husband ... an offering of love that is also a search for knowledge.'' (Publication summary)
'Mischka’s War defies genre. Readers of Fitzpatrick’s two previous books in this vein – My Father’s Daughter (2010) and A Spy in the Archive (2013) – will recognise the artful weaving of memoir, family history and historical scholarship. She is not alone among historians, particularly late in their careers or in retirement, to turn their well-honed skills to subjects close to home. Fitzpatrick’s contributions are a model for how to craft an intimate, highly readable and deeply informed narrative.' (Introduction)
'Sheila Fitzpatrick brilliantly illuminates her subject and his tumultuous times'
'Mischka’s War defies genre. Readers of Fitzpatrick’s two previous books in this vein – My Father’s Daughter (2010) and A Spy in the Archive (2013) – will recognise the artful weaving of memoir, family history and historical scholarship. She is not alone among historians, particularly late in their careers or in retirement, to turn their well-honed skills to subjects close to home. Fitzpatrick’s contributions are a model for how to craft an intimate, highly readable and deeply informed narrative.' (Introduction)
'Sheila Fitzpatrick brilliantly illuminates her subject and his tumultuous times'