Terri E. (stocktonmalonefan) - reviewed on + 58 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 28
Wow. This book was well written, beautiful, haunting, melancholy, tragic,
incredible. I give it five stars. The best book I've read in a while. It is a
story of a mother and daughter who come from Germany after the end of WWII to
live in Minnesota. It has chapters that are in their current life where the
daughter is grown-up and a professor and chapters that are when she was a small
child with her 23 year old mother in Germany at the break-out of WWII through
'til the end of the war.
I especially liked it because it gives you a view of what it could have been
like being a German citizen who was not involved in the SS/Nazi regime and
trying to survive. I never really thought about what it could have been like for
the average German citizen. Whenever I think of Germany during that time I've
usually thought something along the lines of "Why didn't they do anything?
Didn't they see what was happening with the Jews? Why didn't they help them?"
Etc. This book made me go deeper and ask myself new questions: "What would I
have done? Would I have stayed silent to keep my own life or the lives of those
around me safe? Would I have helped the Jews that went into hiding knowing that
it would put myself and loved ones in peril? Would I have "entertained" an SS
officer to keep us alive, all the while hating myself? It is one thing to say
that I would do this or that if it were just me--but what about when you have
children?"
A very interesting and eye-opening read.
incredible. I give it five stars. The best book I've read in a while. It is a
story of a mother and daughter who come from Germany after the end of WWII to
live in Minnesota. It has chapters that are in their current life where the
daughter is grown-up and a professor and chapters that are when she was a small
child with her 23 year old mother in Germany at the break-out of WWII through
'til the end of the war.
I especially liked it because it gives you a view of what it could have been
like being a German citizen who was not involved in the SS/Nazi regime and
trying to survive. I never really thought about what it could have been like for
the average German citizen. Whenever I think of Germany during that time I've
usually thought something along the lines of "Why didn't they do anything?
Didn't they see what was happening with the Jews? Why didn't they help them?"
Etc. This book made me go deeper and ask myself new questions: "What would I
have done? Would I have stayed silent to keep my own life or the lives of those
around me safe? Would I have helped the Jews that went into hiding knowing that
it would put myself and loved ones in peril? Would I have "entertained" an SS
officer to keep us alive, all the while hating myself? It is one thing to say
that I would do this or that if it were just me--but what about when you have
children?"
A very interesting and eye-opening read.
Back to all reviews by this member
Back to all reviews of this book
Back to Book Reviews
Back to Book Details
Back to all reviews of this book
Back to Book Reviews
Back to Book Details