Uri Orlev

1931–2022

Novelist Uri Orlev, born Jerzy Henryk Orlowski, was renowned for his children’s books, many of which engage with themes of the Holocaust drawn directly from his own childhood. Born in Warsaw, Orlev survived the Warsaw ghetto, living in hiding on the Aryan side, and was finally flushed out in the Hotel Polski affair. Deported to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, he began writing poetry in Polish. After the war, he arrived in Mandatory Palestine with his younger brother, learned Hebrew, and lived on various kibbutzim before moving to Jerusalem. He published more than thirty books and was a major translator from Polish into Hebrew. In addition to his literary career, Orlev wrote for television and radio in Israel. The Lead Soldiers, his first and most famous book, was written for adults, not for children.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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The Lead Soldiers

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Formations of soldiers faced each other across the floor, taking cover in domino houses and bunkers of colored blocks. Yurik and Kazik lay by their soldiers. [ . . . ] But Kazik had stopped playing…

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The Island on Bird Street

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Freddy laid the soldier on the floor and said, “Now that I have a rifle and bullets, I’ll join the uprising tonight. But Henryk will stay with you. His wound isn’t serious. The bullet can be gotten…