The survivors survived and their families and other people didn't.
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Another reason is mentioned and that is: 'Why me?' It obviously was not the case that the good survived and the not-so-good perished: it was arbitrary.
Survivors in the book "Night" may feel guilty for various reasons, including Survivor's guilt for outliving others who perished, feeling responsible for not being able to help others more, or questioning their own actions and decisions during the horrors of the Holocaust. These feelings of guilt often stem from the immense trauma and suffering they endured.
When Elie Wiesel's father is dying near the end of the book, he asks Elie for some water but Elie knows it won't help him because he is hopelessly ill so he denies him the water, his father's last plead to his son and Elie feels guilty but there wasn't anything he could do to save his father.
Not likely. When the 1997 movie came out, there were only five survivors still living and none were involved. Walter Lord, however, interviewed 53 survivors to write the book "A Night To Remember" and several survivors contributed to THAT accompanying movie.
Survivors; Book 2: A Hidden Enemy
Yes there are a few... Elie Wiesel is one... He wrote a book called Night, and its very informational!
Joey is 11 years old in the book "One of the Survivors."
The book after "Darkness Falls" in the Survivors series is "The Broken Path."
For being one of the survivors of the Holocaust. He wrote 57 books about his experience on the concentration camps. His most famous book is Night.
Well obviously, the only people who can answer this are survivors of this unfortunate event. One of these survivors is Elie Wiesel, a well known author of the Holocaust. Read his book "Night", and you might have a better understanding.
No it is not. i think there is 1 more book.
Burned, I think.
i dont think so
I think it's Eliezer's dad.
"Guilty Pleasures" was written by Laurell K. Hamilton. It is the first book in the Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series.