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Book Cover for: Crash of the Heavens: The Remarkable Story of Hannah Senesh and the Only Military Mission to Rescue Europe's Jews During World War II, Douglas Century

Crash of the Heavens: The Remarkable Story of Hannah Senesh and the Only Military Mission to Rescue Europe's Jews During World War II

Douglas Century

The awe-inspiring and largely untold story of Hannah Senesh, a female paratrooper in World War II whose courage and sacrifice during a daring mission to rescue Europe's Jews left an indelible mark on history.

In the years before World War II, thousands of young Jewish men and women escaped Europe, seeking safety in the British Mandate for Palestine. By 1942, horrifying reports began to spread about ghettos being liquidated, industrialized killing centers in Poland, and a chilling campaign to exterminate Europe's entire Jewish population. When it became clear that the Allies were unwilling to spare any forces from the war effort to save civilians, the Jewish community in Palestine came up with a daring plan.

Working with British Military Intelligence, an elite unit of young Jewish paratroopers volunteered to return to Eastern Europe. Once behind enemy lines, they would use their expertise in the local languages and terrain to rescue thousands of downed Allied pilots and escaped POWs who were trapped with no way to communicate--highly trained airmen desperately needed by the British and American air forces to fly more bombing missions.

At the same time, these volunteer commandos would help Jewish civilians escape deportation to Auschwitz and other death camps or take up arms in resistance against the Nazis. Hannah Senesh was one of only three female paratroopers who risked everything to infiltrate occupied Europe.

In 1939, at just eighteen years old, Hannah emigrated from Hungary to the British Mandate for Palestine, where she dreamed of being a poet and a schoolteacher. Instead, she became a poet and a paratrooper. Five years after fleeing Europe, Hannah parachuted back into occupied territory as a freedom fighter with the most crucial role in her team: the wireless operator tasked with sending and deciphering top-secret British radio codes. Though captured almost immediately after crossing the border into Hungary, she refused to give up her radio codes or any information about her mission, despite enduring months of horrific torture. Her final act of defiance--choosing to die before a firing squad rather than beg for clemency--cemented her legendary status as the "Jewish Joan of Arc."

Hannah's legacy lives on today in the widely published diary she'd kept since age thirteen and in her poetry which has inspired generations. Each year on Holocaust Remembrance Day, a short poem Hannah composed on the shores of the Mediterranean in 1942 is sung at ceremonies around the world. Titled "Eli, Eli," or "My God, My God," it has become a modern hymn, taught in schools, sung in synagogues, and printed in thousands of prayerbooks.

More than just a gripping historical account of Hannah's life and afterlife, Crash of the Heavens offers a powerful reminder of the human spirit's ability to shine, even in the darkest of times.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster
  • Publish Date: Nov 18th, 2025
  • Pages: 432
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.20in - 6.30in - 1.60in - 1.45lb
  • EAN: 9781668035276
  • Categories: Modern - 20th Century - HolocaustWars & Conflicts - World War II - GeneralWomen

About the Author

Century, Douglas: - Douglas Century is the author and coauthor of numerous bestselling books including Hunting El Chapo, Under and Alone, Brotherhood of Warriors, Barney Ross: The Life of a Jewish Fighter, The Last Boss of Brighton, and Takedown: The Fall of the Last Mafia Empire. His World War II nonfiction narrative, No Surrender, coauthored with Chris Edmonds, was the recipient of a 2020 Christopher Award. A veteran investigative journalist, Century has written for The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Billboard, The Globe and Mail (Toronto), and The Guardian.

Praise for this book

"Impeccably researched, powerfully told, Crash of the Heavens is a testament to courage, determination and resilience. A story for our times." --Esther Gilbert, founder and editor, Holocaust Memoir Digest
"What a story! Crash of the Heavens is a magnificent masterwork, and you won't be able to put it down." --Colonel Jack Jacobs, U.S. Army (retired), Congressional Medal of Honor recipient, author of If Not Now, When?
Praise for The Last Boss of Brighton: Boris "Biba" Nayfeld and the Rise of the Russian Mob in America

"Riveting." --The Globe and Mail

"A brilliant, blood-soaked biography." --The Sunday Telegraph

"A fascinating, page-turning story of a genuine scoundrel." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Praise for Barney Ross: The Life of a Jewish Fighter

"An excellent story of a man and his times." --The New York Times Book Review

"The research is impressive. . . . The prose is trim and elegant, and lands its emotional blows with very effective precision. . . . Century doesn't waste a single paragraph." --Newsday

"Fascinating . . . A powerful account." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Hannah Senesh isn't just a hero. She's a reminder of what happens when Jews stop running and start fighting. Crash of the Heavens captures the essence of that moment--when young volunteers, men and women, parachuted into the heart of Nazi-occupied Europe not as victims but as warriors." --Aaron Cohen, author of Brotherhood of Warriors
"Haunted and blessed by the specter of Hannah Senesh since childhood, it's only now, via Douglas Century's wonderful new narrative, that I feel I understand her as an adult, as a woman, as a Jew, and as a human being. Her heroism and lyricism were a gift, and this fresh perspective is a joy." --Elisa Albert, author of Human Blues
"In breathless prose and cinematic detail, the book presents the men and women from all backgrounds joined in concert to save something of European Jewry. We hear the roar of airplane engines, feel the wind as they jump, and brace for impact as they land. We follow them through Eastern European woodlands and shadow them through city streets. . . . This is a book of inspiration for our time, when heroism and self-sacrifice have lost their luster." --Kirkus Reviews