Book description
During the 1930s and 40s the Lilliput Troupe, a beloved and
successful family of singers and actors, dazzled with their vaudeville
programme and unique performances. The only all-dwarf show of the
time, their small stature earned them fame Â- and, ironically,
ultimately saved their lives. As Hitler's war descended, the Ovitz
family Â- seven of whom were dwarfs Â- was plunged into the horrors of
the darkest moments in modern history. Descending from the cattle
train into the death camp of Auschwitz, they were separated from other
Jewish victims on the orders of one Dr Joseph Mengele, the  Angel of
Death'. Obsessed with eugenics, Dr Mengele carried out a series of
loathsome experiments on the family and developed a disturbing
fondness for his human lab-rats, so much so that when the Russian army
liberated Auschwitz, all members of the family Â- the youngest, a baby
boy just eighteen months old; the oldest, a 58-year-old woman Â- were
still alive. Based on exhaustive research and interviews with Perla
Ovitz, the troupe's last-surviving member, and scores of Auschwitz
survivors, authors Yehuda Koren and Eilat Negev deftly describe the
moving and inspirational story of this remarkable family and their
indomitable will to survive.