Two Sisters: Betrayal, Love, and Resistance in Wartime France

This riveting book is an astonishing testimony of what befell two sisters, Whitehouse's own mother-in-law and aunt, who managed to escape the killing fields in Vichy France against all odds.

Marion and Huguette Müller's family was torn apart when the Nazis invaded France in 1940. After their mother was deported to Auschwitz, the sisters fled to the small Alpine ski resort village of Val d'Isère, where they were rescued by a brave young doctor.

Through intrepid reporting and meticulous research, Whitehouse traces the story of the Müller sisters, solving decades-old mysteries in her attempt to deliver both closure and justice. With skill and urgency, Whitehouse raises moral questions at the heart of the tragedy of the Shoah: questions about complicity, culpability, about duty to your country and your fellow man. She sifts through thousands of records and pieces together how the sisters were saved, and how so many others were lost.

It is a tale full of shocking discoveries featuring a bloodthirsty killer, secret operatives of the French resistance, forged documents, narrow escapes, and miracles.

“A compelling account of survival and remembrance.”-Booklist

1145843570
Two Sisters: Betrayal, Love, and Resistance in Wartime France

This riveting book is an astonishing testimony of what befell two sisters, Whitehouse's own mother-in-law and aunt, who managed to escape the killing fields in Vichy France against all odds.

Marion and Huguette Müller's family was torn apart when the Nazis invaded France in 1940. After their mother was deported to Auschwitz, the sisters fled to the small Alpine ski resort village of Val d'Isère, where they were rescued by a brave young doctor.

Through intrepid reporting and meticulous research, Whitehouse traces the story of the Müller sisters, solving decades-old mysteries in her attempt to deliver both closure and justice. With skill and urgency, Whitehouse raises moral questions at the heart of the tragedy of the Shoah: questions about complicity, culpability, about duty to your country and your fellow man. She sifts through thousands of records and pieces together how the sisters were saved, and how so many others were lost.

It is a tale full of shocking discoveries featuring a bloodthirsty killer, secret operatives of the French resistance, forged documents, narrow escapes, and miracles.

“A compelling account of survival and remembrance.”-Booklist

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Two Sisters: Betrayal, Love, and Resistance in Wartime France

Two Sisters: Betrayal, Love, and Resistance in Wartime France

by Rosie Whitehouse

Narrated by Rosie Whitehouse

Unabridged — 6 hours, 22 minutes

Two Sisters: Betrayal, Love, and Resistance in Wartime France

Two Sisters: Betrayal, Love, and Resistance in Wartime France

by Rosie Whitehouse

Narrated by Rosie Whitehouse

Unabridged — 6 hours, 22 minutes

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Overview

This riveting book is an astonishing testimony of what befell two sisters, Whitehouse's own mother-in-law and aunt, who managed to escape the killing fields in Vichy France against all odds.

Marion and Huguette Müller's family was torn apart when the Nazis invaded France in 1940. After their mother was deported to Auschwitz, the sisters fled to the small Alpine ski resort village of Val d'Isère, where they were rescued by a brave young doctor.

Through intrepid reporting and meticulous research, Whitehouse traces the story of the Müller sisters, solving decades-old mysteries in her attempt to deliver both closure and justice. With skill and urgency, Whitehouse raises moral questions at the heart of the tragedy of the Shoah: questions about complicity, culpability, about duty to your country and your fellow man. She sifts through thousands of records and pieces together how the sisters were saved, and how so many others were lost.

It is a tale full of shocking discoveries featuring a bloodthirsty killer, secret operatives of the French resistance, forged documents, narrow escapes, and miracles.

“A compelling account of survival and remembrance.”-Booklist


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

11/25/2024

Journalist Whitehouse (The People on the Beach) delivers a heartrending account of her mother-in-law’s experiences during the Holocaust. Huguette Müller and her sister, Marion, escaped the Nazis with the help of a French doctor named Frédéric Pétri in 1943. To flesh out that story beyond Huguette’s memory of it, Whitehouse tracked down the doctor’s relatives in California, conducted interviews, and combed through historical records in hopes of adding Dr. Pétri to the Righteous Among the Nations at Yad Vashem. Interwoven with the details of Whitehouse’s reporting is a portrait of the white-collar Müller family, professionals who distanced themselves from their Judaism in 1920s and ’30s Berlin. When the Nazis came to power, the Müllers fled to France, where Huguette and Marion’s mother was captured and sent to Auschwitz. The sisters escaped to a ski resort in the French Alps, where Huguette broke her leg and was treated by Dr. Pétri, who took her into his home so they could avoid detection by the Gestapo at a local hospital, and eventually helped them leave France. Whitehouse nimbly balances a white-knuckle wartime narrative with a trenchant examination of the politics of Vichy France. This makes a well-covered historical period feel agonizingly immediate. Photos. (Jan.)

From the Publisher

"[An] evocative and wrenching family history."—Wall Street Journal

"As intricate as it is arresting . . . Two Sisters is a brilliant mediation on family and trauma across generations, a much-needed critical reappraisal of the Jewish experience in France during the Holocaust, and a reminder of just how complicated and nuanced individual stories can be—even, and perhaps especially, the stories of those we feel we know so well."—James McAuley, author of The House of Fragile Things, winner of the 2022 National Jewish Book Award in History

"Brilliantly researched and beautifully written, Two Sisters tells the story of the Holocaust in France through a family caught in the maelstrom. . . . With consummate skill, Rosie Whitehouse tells a story of horror and heroism, desperation and defiance, in a remarkable chronicle of the Holocaust."—Edward Serotta, journalist, filmmaker, and author of Jews, Germany, Memory

Product Details

BN ID: 2940192067338
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 01/28/2025
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Excerpt

Chapter 3: The Exodus

At five o’clock in the morning on May 10, 1940, the high-pitched wail of the sirens on the Eiffel Tower cut through the air. Edith and Johannes ran to the window and looked up in fear at the empty sky. The Germans had invaded Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg. Three days later came the terrifying news that the Wehrmacht had broken through the thick forests of the Ardennes.
            Bedraggled refugees were soon seen on the streets of Paris pushing carts and prams loaded with suitcases and pots and pans. The smell of burning paper wafted in thorough the French windows of the sitting room on rue de Miromesnil as officials in the ministries burned files and documents. Rumors flew around—all of them contradictory—as the German army pushed towards the Channel ports to take the fight to the British army stranded on the beaches of Dunkirk. Life in Paris, however, went on with a veneer of normality until just before lunch on June 3 when a low buzzing sound could be heard through Edith’s kitchen window. It grew louder until it became a persistent menacing drone. There was a rattle of antiaircraft guns and then came the deep reverberating echo of explosions. The Citroën armaments factory on Quai de Javel was blown to pieces. The tension inside the apartment must have been palpable. Marion was in the south of France working for her father and only twelve-year-old Huguette was at home. Even if her parents hid their fear from her, there must have been arguments and recriminations behind closed doors.

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