As German troops and bombs descended upon Poland, Krysia struggled to
make sense of the wailing sirens, hushed adult conversations, and
tearful faces of everyone around her. Within just days, the peaceful
childhood she had known would disappear forever.
Krysia tells the story of one Polish girl's harrowing experiences
during World War II as her beloved father was forced into hiding, a
Soviet soldier's family took over her house, and finally as she and her
mother and brother were forced at gunpoint from their once happy home
and deported to a remote Soviet work farm in Kazakhstan.
Through vivid and stirring recollections Mihulka details their
deplorable conditions--often near freezing in their barrack buried under
mounds of snow, enduring starvation and illness, and witnessing death.
But she also recalls moments of hope and tenderness as she, her mother,
her brother, and other deportees drew close together, helped one
another, and even held small celebrations in captivity. Throughout, the
strength, courage, and kindness of Krysia's mother, Zofia, saw them
through until they finally found freedom.