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Saturday, May 12, 2018

THE ZOOKEEPER'S WIFE - Official Trailer [HD] - In Theaters March ...
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For the book's 2017 film adaptation, see The Zookeeper's Wife (film).

The Zookeeper's Wife is a non-fiction book written by the poet and naturalist Diane Ackerman. Drawing on the unpublished diary of Antonina ?abi?ska, it recounts the true story of how Antonina and her husband, Jan ?abi?ski, director of the Warsaw Zoo, saved the lives of 300 Jews who had been imprisoned in the Warsaw Ghetto following the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939. The book was first published in 2007 by W. W. Norton.


Video The Zookeeper's Wife



Plot summary

In the 1930s, Jan ?abi?ski was the director of the thriving zoo in Warsaw, Poland; his wife Antonina had a remarkable sympathy for animals, and their villa in the zoo was a nursery and residence for numerous animals as well as their son. This life came to an abrupt end with the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, which started World War II (1939-1945). Most of the zoo's animals and structures were destroyed in the bombings and siege of the city. The zoo was closed under German occupation, but the ?abi?skis continued to occupy the villa, and the zoo itself was used first as a pig farm and subsequently as a fur farm.

Jan and Antonina ?abi?ski became active with the Polish underground resistance. At the villa and in the zoo's structures, they secretly sheltered Jews, most escaping from the doomed Warsaw ghetto. As many as 300 such "guests" passed through the zoo, and many did survive the war with the assistance of the ?abi?skis and other members of the underground. Although the German occupiers executed those they discovered helping Jews, Antonina ?abi?ska maintained a semblance of prewar life at the villa, harboring a menagerie of animals - such as otters, a badger, hyena pups, lynxes, and a rabbit - as well as the secret guests.

Although Jan ?abi?ski was wounded in the armed August 1944 Warsaw uprising against the German occupiers and was, for a time, interred in a POW camp, the ?abi?skis survived the war. The zoo reopened in 1949, with Jan as its new director. On September 21, 1965, Yad Vashem (Israel's official memorial to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust) recognized Jan and Antonina ?abi?ski as Righteous Among the Nations.


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Reception

Critical reception

Donna Seaman wrote enthusiastically in her Los Angeles Times review, "It is no stretch to say that this is the book Ackerman was meant to write. Ever since A Natural History of the Senses, she has been building a galaxy of incandescent works that celebrate the unity and wonder of the living world. But every rapturous hour she has spent communing with plants and animals, every insight gleaned into human nature, every moment under the spell of language is a steppingstone that led her to Poland, the home of her maternal grandparents, and to the incomparable heroes Jan and Antonina Zabinski. The result of her tenacious research, keen interpretation and her own "transmigration of sensibility" is a shining book beyond category." D. T. Max wrote in The New York Times, "This is an absorbing book, diminished sometimes by the choppy way Ackerman balances Antonina's account with the larger story of the Warsaw Holocaust. For me, the more interesting story is Antonina's. She was not, as her husband once called her, "a housewife," but the alpha female in a unique menagerie."

For Orion Magazine Suzanne Antonetta wrote: "Ackerman, with her profound understanding of nature, tells Antonina's story in a way that makes it clear her roles as the zookeeper's wife and heroine of the Resistance are inextricably connected, both in what the natural world has taught her, and taught her to accept."

Popular reception

On February 10, 2008, the book was number 13 on The New York Times non-fiction best seller list.

Honors

In 2008, The Zookeeper's Wife won the annual Orion Book Award from Orion Magazine; the selection committee noted, "The Zookeeper's Wife is a groundbreaking work of nonfiction in which the human relationship to nature is explored in an absolutely original way through looking at the Holocaust."


The Zookeeper's Wife Official Trailer #1 (2017) Jessica Chastain ...
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Adaptations

In 2013, plans were announced for a an eponymous feature film adaptation. The film is based on a screenplay by Angela Workman, directed by Niki Caro, and starring Jessica Chastain, Johan Heldenbergh, Michael McElhatton and Daniel Brühl. The film was released on March 31, 2017.


The real 'Zookeeper's Wife' - CNN Video
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References


The Zookeeper's Wife Clip: Stay Safe - Box Office Buz
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Further reading

  • Linfield, Susie (September 7, 2007). "A Natural History of Terrible Things". The Washington Post. At the heart of the Nazis' madness, she implies, lay a paradoxical refusal to control our most amoral impulses on the one hand and to accept the natural world's imperfections on the other. 

The Zookeeper's Wife - OFFICIAL TRAILER HD - YouTube
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External links

  • The Zookeeper's Wife: Fact vs. Fiction

Source of article : Wikipedia