Survivor Story: Bug Spray

“Each day, when I returned to camp from a work detail in the cement factory or on the railroad, I was sprayed with so-called bug poison, the likely reason I later had chronic skin cancer.” Read about two Holocaust survivors, German Jewish newlyweds sent to America by their parents to have children to “save our people,” in One Person’s Loss. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

Workers were sprayed daily with “bug poison,” a likely cause of skin cancer
Berlin, 1937. Jewish newlyweds flee Germany for Brooklyn on the eve of the Nazi slaughter

Author: annsepstein@att.net

Ann S. Epstein is an award-winning writer of novels, short stories, memoirs, and essays.

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