A Jew in the Woods: Pages from a Diary by Berl Kagan

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English
White Goat Press
June 23, 2026

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Preorder book releases August 18, 2026

Kirkus *starred* Review

Translated by Max Rosenfeld

“Life goes on even when you hear the sound of death’s wings fluttering over you every minute of the day and night.”

Of the 35,000 Lithuanian Jews trapped by the Germans in the Kovno Ghet­to, most did not survive. Berl Kagan, a 34-year-old journalist and political activist, was among the few who escaped the ghetto before it was liquidated. Yet this bid for freedom was only the first step in a protracted quest to cheat almost-certain death. With his wife and sister-in-law, Kagan spent nine months in the forest, facing near-starvation, freezing temperatures, and the ever-present threat of capture and murder. The Red Army was advancing—but how many miracles would it take to see the day of liberation?

Over the course of those dark, intrepid months, Kagan somehow kept a journal, recording his day-to-day life with unflinching lucidity and eloquence. The experience of Jews who fled to the woods of Eastern Europe during the Holocaust is little documented—but here we have an electrifying, real-time account of, in the author’s words, “one long, horror-filled drama.” Both riveting and ashimmer with moral beauty and hope, A Jew in the Woods is an astonishing testament to the resilience of the human spirit.

Advance Kirkus review of A Jew in The Woods:

Kagan was a renowned Jewish scholar, editor of Yiddish literature, and author of several books following his immigration to the United States from Italy in 1950. He first published the diary of his Holocaust survival in the original Yiddish in 1955. Readers now have access to an English version of this diary; Kagan’s daughter donated the handwritten original to the Archives of the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York after Kagan’s death in 1993. It’s a firsthand account, starting in 1943, of a survivor whose experience included one of the lesser-known aspects of the Holocaust: the fact that many Jewish people in Eastern Europe managed to evade the Gestapo by hiding in forest camps. To be sure, this diary covers much more than this topic, including the perilous situation of the “Righteous Gentiles” who hid the author and other Jews until they could do so no longer, as well as Kagan’s tough decision to flee the Kovno Ghetto, which he regretted before learning the fate of those who’d stayed behind. Still, it’s Kagan’s account of hiding in nature with his wife, sister-in-law, and others, evading predators both human and animal, that makes this work stand out: (“That first night we hardly shut our eyes. Animals of all sorts scream and growl.”) Overall, this diary offers raw, firsthand recollections, conveying fear, despair, and hope—as well as the later challenges of readjusting to freedom. It also honestly shows the ambivalence of the people who sheltered Kagan and others in a one-room cottage with few hiding places. Portions of the work can be very difficult to read, such as a recollection of sexual liaisons between a Jewish woman and her rescuers, which the author tentatively acknowledges may not have been consensual.

A welcome and necessary addition to the growing canon of firsthand accounts of Jewish survival during World War II.

Paperback 149 pages 

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