Prior sources for the Zisblatt diamond story?
Posted: Tue Feb 03, 2026 2:55 pm
I was reading a Stephen King novel called Apt Pupil. It's about a boy and his neighbor who's this notorious Nazi fugitive living under an assumed name. The boy has a morbid fascination with concentration camp stories because he thinks they're "neat," and he finds out about the old man and wants him to tell him all his gruesome stories. It's an amusing read for a revisionist, and quite over the top (as you'd expect from a writer like King). You've got your gas coming out of the shower heads, human skin lampshades, Jewish soap, all the familiar stuff. Here's one passage talking about how prisoners would hide contraband.
Zisblatt's story does not appear to have been public knowledge until the Spielberg documentary in 1998. Her memoir is even later, 2008. She had given a Shoah Foundation interview in 1995 (this was ultimately how she was selected for the documentary).
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/vha7832
I don't see anything before 1995. I did a quick NY Times search and it seems her public profile is basically limited to The Last Days, and really only revisionists have heard of her (mostly because of the Eric Hunt doc).
Apt Pupil was first published in 1982 in Different Seasons, a collection of four shorter novels/stories King had in his drawer. According to King in the afterword, Apt Pupil was written "in a two-week period following the completion of The Shining." The Shining was published in 1977, so that would probably mean 1976.
This all got me wondering if this story had always been "around" or if it's something King made up in 1976. If King is the earliest example of this story, then most likely Zisblat directly or indirectly got the story from Apt Pupil (that seems more plausible than her independently coming up with the same story as it's quite specific). There are lots of stories about people hiding valuables in bodily orifices, but I don't recall an earlier example of this specific story of swallowing diamonds, defecating them out, and re-swallowing them repeatedly.
I have to say I am a little disappointed with Zisblatt. Although she's a fraud, I thought she at least deserved some points for creativity! But it seems we can't even credit her with that.
When I read this I of course immediately recognized it as the Zisblatt story, but curiously the King novel was published years before.One woman, he remembered, had had a small diamond, flawed, it turned out, really not valuable at all--but it had been in her family for six generations, passed from mother to eldest daughter (or so she said, but of course she was a Jew and all of them lied). She swallowed it before entering Patin [note: fictional concentration camp]. When it came out in her waste, she swallowed it again. She kept doing this, although eventually the diamond began to cut her insides and she bled. (Apt Pupil, Ch 9)
Zisblatt's story does not appear to have been public knowledge until the Spielberg documentary in 1998. Her memoir is even later, 2008. She had given a Shoah Foundation interview in 1995 (this was ultimately how she was selected for the documentary).
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/vha7832
I don't see anything before 1995. I did a quick NY Times search and it seems her public profile is basically limited to The Last Days, and really only revisionists have heard of her (mostly because of the Eric Hunt doc).
Apt Pupil was first published in 1982 in Different Seasons, a collection of four shorter novels/stories King had in his drawer. According to King in the afterword, Apt Pupil was written "in a two-week period following the completion of The Shining." The Shining was published in 1977, so that would probably mean 1976.
This all got me wondering if this story had always been "around" or if it's something King made up in 1976. If King is the earliest example of this story, then most likely Zisblat directly or indirectly got the story from Apt Pupil (that seems more plausible than her independently coming up with the same story as it's quite specific). There are lots of stories about people hiding valuables in bodily orifices, but I don't recall an earlier example of this specific story of swallowing diamonds, defecating them out, and re-swallowing them repeatedly.
I have to say I am a little disappointed with Zisblatt. Although she's a fraud, I thought she at least deserved some points for creativity! But it seems we can't even credit her with that.

