Read the excerpt from The Devil’s Arithmetic by Jane Yolen. "Give them this!” Grandpa Will shouted at the TV, holding up his left arm to the set. The sleeve of his shirt was rolled up above the elbow. The photograph of a Nazi colonel, standing sharply at attention, flashed by. "I’ll give them this!” Read the excerpt from Refugee by Alan Gratz. "Gathering us?” Papa said. He looked even more frightened by the prospect than Josef’s mother had. "Like—like a roll call?” He stood up and backed against a wall. "No,” he said. "The things that happened at roll call. The hangings. The floggings. The drownings. The beatings.” He wrapped his arms around himself, and Josef knew his father was talking about that place. Dachau. Josef and his mother stood like statues, afraid to break the spell. "Once, I saw another man shot dead with a rifle,” his father whispered. "He was standing right beside me. He was standing right beside me, and I couldn’t move, couldn’t make a sound, or I would be next.” In these excerpts, how do Gratz and Yolen write differently about Holocaust survivors?