1. Dreyfus, Jean-Marc e Gensburger, Sarah. Nazi Labour Camps in Paris: Austerlitz, Levitan, Bassano, July de 1943-August 1944. Nova York: Berghahn Books, 2011, pp. 9-11.
2. Ibidem.
3. Sutter, Sem C. “The Lost Jewish Libraries of Vilna and the Frankfurt Institut zur Erforschung der Judenfrage”, p. 221, em Lost Libraries (ed. James Raven). Nova York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
4. Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy. “The Road to Minsk for Western ‘Trophy’ Books: Twice Plundered but Not Yet Home from the War”, Libraries & Culture, vol. 39, nº 4, 2004.
5. Rozier, Gilles. “The Bibliothèque Medem: Eighty Years Serving Yiddish Culture”, Judaica Librarianship, 2004, pp. 4-15.
6. Hill, E. Leonidas. “The Nazi Attack on ‘Un-German’ Literature, 1933-1945”, p. 31, The Holocaust and the Book (ed. Jonathan Rose). Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2001.
7. Curtis, Michael. Verdict on Vichy: Power and Prejudice in the Vichy France Regime. Nova York: Arcade, 2003, pp. 148-149.
8. Cowan, James. “Sebald’s Austerlitz and the Great Library”, em W. G. Sebald: Schreiben ex patria (ed. Gerhard Fischer). Amsterdã: Rodopi, 2009.
9. Knuth, Rebecca. Libricide: The Regime-Sponsored Destruction of Books and Libraries in the Twentieth Century, Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003, pp. 92-93.
10. Sutter, “The Lost Jewish Libraries of Vilna and the Frankfurt Institut zur Erforschung der Judenfrage”, p. 222.
11. Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy. “Reconstructing the Record of Nazi Cultural Plunder”, Amsterdã: IISH, 2011, p. 30.
12. Glad, John. Conversations in Exile: Russian Writers Abroad. Durham, NC: Duke University Press Books, 1992, pp. 271-273.
13. Service, Robert. Lenin: A Biography. Londres: Pan, 2010, p. 189.
14. Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy. “The Odyssey of the Turgenev Library from Paris, 1940-2002. Books as Victims and Trophies of War”. Amsterdã: IISH, 2003, p. 24.
15. Greenbaum, Avraham. “Bibliographical Essay”, p. 381, em Pogroms: Anti-Jewish Violence in Modern Russian History. Cambridge University Press, 2004.
16. Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy. “The Odyssey of the Petliura Library and the Records of the Ukrainian National Republic During World War II”. Texto extraído de Cultures and Nations of Central and Eastern Europe in Honor of Roman Szporluk (ed. Zvi Gitelman). Cambridge, MA: Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, 2000, pp. 181-208.
17. Berberova, Nina. “The Disappearance of the Turgenev Library”, trad. Patsy Southgate, Grand Street, nº 41, 1992, pp. 94-101.
18. Ibidem.
19. Grimsted, “The Odyssey of the Turgenev Library from Paris, 1940-2002”, pp. 36-37.
20. Laskarzewska, Hanna. La Bibliothèque Polonaise de Paris: Les Peregrinations de Collections dans les Années 1940-1992, Paris: Bibliothèque Polonaise, 2004.
21. Sutter, Sem C. “Polish Books in Exile: Cultural Booty Across Two Continents, Through Two Wars”, pp. 144-145, The Holocaust and the Book (ed. Jonathan Rose), Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2001.
22. Ibidem, pp. 144-147.
23. Ibidem, p. 148.
24. Laskarzewska, La Bibliotheque Polonaise de Paris.
25. Ibidem.
26. Eckert, Astrid. The Struggle for the Files: The Western Allies and the Return of German Archives After the Second World War, Cambridge University Press, pp. 99-100.
27. Grimsted, “The Odyssey of the Petliura Library and the Records of the Ukrainian National Republic During World War II”, pp. 181-208.
28. Grimsted, “The Odyssey of the Turgenev Library from Paris, 1940-2002”, pp. 38-34.