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Maus : un survivant raconte. 2, Et c'est là que mes ennuis ont commencé

par Art Spiegelman

Séries: Maus (2), Maus (2)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
7,3141381,235 (4.48)377
Le père de l'auteur, Vladek, juif polonais, rescapé d'Auschwitz, raconte sa vie de 1930 à 1944, date de sa déportation. Ce récit est rapporté sous la forme d'une bande dessinée dont les personnages ont une tête d'animal : les juifs sont des souris, les nazis des chats, les Polonais des porcs et les Américains des chiens.--[Memento]… (plus d'informations)
  1. 50
    Palestine par Joe Sacco (SqueakyChu)
    SqueakyChu: This is only for those not too raw after reading Maus and its sequel. I must warn you that Palestine does not paint a pretty picture of Jews or Israel, but Joe Sacco does an amazing job of revealing the story of a people through the use of graphic novel. He uses this genre, as does Art Spiegelman, to reveal heartfelt pain.… (plus d'informations)
  2. 40
    Persepolis par Marjane Satrapi (Tjarda)
  3. 30
    Maus : un survivant raconte. 1, Mon père saigne l'histoire par Art Spiegelman (Utilisateur anonyme)
  4. 20
    Open Me... I'm a Dog! par Art Spiegelman (JessamyJane)
  5. 10
    Kafka par David Zane Mairowitz (gust)
  6. 10
    De Avonden / Een beeldverhaal 1 par Dick Matena (gust)
    gust: Ook een graphic novel
  7. 00
    Le complot contre l'Amérique par Philip Roth (bertilak)
  8. 00
    Être sans destin par Imre Kertész (SqueakyChu)
  9. 00
    La mort est mon métier par Robert Merle (yokai)
  10. 00
    Seules contre tous par Miriam Katin (JessamyJane)
  11. 00
    La voleuse de livres par Markus Zusak (edwasho)
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Anglais (134)  Danois (1)  Suédois (1)  Toutes les langues (136)
Affichage de 1-5 de 136 (suivant | tout afficher)
The 1st volume of the story of Polish Jew Vladek Spiegelman took him right up to the gates of Auschwitz. In this second volume, Vladek and his wife survive the horrors of two of the deadliest camps the Nazis ran, but at what cost? As seen in their lives after the war, as well as in the life and psyche of their son, coming out alive at the end of the Holocaust was just the first battle (though granted, a very, very difficult battle).

The previous book was rough enough in some ways, but this one is like a gut punch. The images portrayed of Vladek and those around him, the death and torture, can be difficult to handle. Add to that the depression that Art Spiegelman himself goes through as he works on putting his father's story on paper, and it is not a book to be taken lightly. Amidst the terror, I am still fascinated to read about Vladek's ingenuity, the tricks he used to stay alive. Sometimes it was pure luck, but often it was intelligence and quick thinking.

The emotions were heavy when the separated Vladek and Anja manage to even simply hear word that each other is alive. That hit me hard, thinking about my husband and me being in a similar situation. When I finished the book, I was left with a feeling of heaviness that was hard to shake. There's just no way to be able to imagine a fraction of what those involved in the Holocaust went through, living easy lives as we are. I think it's important for us to never forget what humanity is capable of, lest we begin to believe something like this could never happen again. I would recommend this to be read by anyone interested in this part of history, even if you don't normally read graphic novels. I don't either, but these books have captivated me for years. ( )
  Kristi_D | Sep 22, 2023 |
Amazing books. No other word for it. Painful to read with the difficult relationship between father (Holocaust survivor) and son (writer) that you feel yourself flinching and sometimes turning away from the page. The calm almost flat description of the horrors of the Holocaust that the father relays make them feel even more awful. These acts of brutality were simply every day events that had to be endured and gotten through.

Breathtaking. ( )
  beentsy | Aug 12, 2023 |
This book is appropriate for 5th grade. It's about a rat's time in the Auschwitz concentration camp. This book is heavy, so I wouldn't have it available for students younger than 5th grade because it is about the concentration camps and that can be really dark and sensitive for kids. I don't know that I would have it in my classroom for elementary students. ( )
  sophia_mulkey | Apr 19, 2023 |
Continuing the story from Maus I, Art Spiegelman relates his father's experiences in several concentration camps and what happened to the survivors at the end of the war. This book is darker and more 'graphicly' depicts the deplorable conditions suffered by Jews and other groups the Nazi's imprisoned. The graphic comic also shows his interactions with a parent that is battling multiple illnesses and habits held over from his time in the camps.
Instead of trying to ban these books, I think they should be required reading for everyone. ( )
  AnneMarie2463 | Mar 31, 2023 |
This was a good second volume, though it was more about the present than the past (both the present of the characters, and the emotional rollercoaster the author hit after publishing the first one, which got a bit dicey and uncomfortable at times). I did not feel this volume packed as much punch, nor had much of anything in culminating or having any sort of ending, either in the past or the present. It just abruptly ended, which felt entirely anthithesis of the whole story about how nothing does end. ( )
  wanderlustlover | Dec 26, 2022 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 136 (suivant | tout afficher)
Perhaps no Holocaust narrative will ever contain the whole experience. But Art Spiegelman has found an original and authentic form to draw us closer to its bleak heart.
 
By writing and drawing simply, directly and earnestly, Mr. Spiegelman is able to lend his father's journey into hell and back an immediacy and poignance... In recounting the tales of both the father and the son in "Maus" and now in "Maus II," Mr. Spiegelman has stretched the boundaries of the comic book form and in doing so has created one of the most powerful and original memoirs to come along in recent years.
 

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Mickey Mouse is the most miserable ideal ever revealed...Healthy emotions tell every independent young man and every honorable youth that the dirty and filth-covered vermin, the greatest bacteria carrier in the animal kingdom, cannot be the ideal type of animal...Away with Jewish brutalization of the people! Down with Mickey Mouse! Wear the Swastika Cross!
--newspaper article, pomerania, Germany, mid-1930s
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Thanks to Paul Pavel, Deborah Karl, and Mala Spiegelman for helping this volume into the world.
Thanks to the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation for a fellowship that allowed me to focus on completing Maus.
And my thanks, with love and admiration, to Francoise Mouly for her intelligence, integrity, editorial skills, and for her love.
For Richieu and for Nadja
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Summer vacation. Francoise and I were staying with friends in Vermont...
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This is the single volume edition of "Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began". It does NOT contain the first volume of the story, Maus I.

DO NOT COMBINE with the omnibus edition containing both Maus I: A Survivor's Tale: My Father Bleeds History and Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began!!!
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Le père de l'auteur, Vladek, juif polonais, rescapé d'Auschwitz, raconte sa vie de 1930 à 1944, date de sa déportation. Ce récit est rapporté sous la forme d'une bande dessinée dont les personnages ont une tête d'animal : les juifs sont des souris, les nazis des chats, les Polonais des porcs et les Américains des chiens.--[Memento]

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