
In The Devil's Arithmetic, 170 pages, by Jane Yolen, a young girl named Hannah is whisked back to a polish village in 1942. Nazis come and take them to a concentration camp. She meets another girl named Rivka that later on is replaed by Hannah to be gassed. Hannah is brave.
Hannah is one brave child. She tells the jew families to not go with the Nazis because she's the only one who knows what will happen. Another reason she's brave is that she promised that she wouldn't cry. Hannah didn't shed one tear, even when it was extremly painful. Hannah sacrifices her life in the end so that Rivka escapes the camp. this book is great for one who is interested in the Halocaust.
Hannah is one brave child. She tells the jew families to not go with the Nazis because she's the only one who knows what will happen. Another reason she's brave is that she promised that she wouldn't cry. Hannah didn't shed one tear, even when it was extremly painful. Hannah sacrifices her life in the end so that Rivka escapes the camp. this book is great for one who is interested in the Halocaust.