Title: The Girl From The Train
Authors: Irma Joubert
Publisher: Harper Collins Christian Publishing
Ages: Adult
Six-year-old Gretl Schmidt is on a train bound for Auschwitz. Jakób Kowalski is planting a bomb on the tracks. Gretl escapes the train only to find herself lost in a country that hates her Jewish ancestry. Hurt and alone, Jakob discovers her and guilt prompts him to help her. For the next three years the two form a bond over the secrets they hide from his family.
Eventually Gretl is sent to South Africa, where German war orphans are promised bright futures with adoptive Protestant families—so long as Gretl’s Jewish roots, Catholic education, and connections to communist Poland are never discovered.
Saying goodbye to the only friend she has, Gretl is fearful they will never see each other again. But the events they have both survived have laid a foundation of love that even being separated by politics, religion, language, and years can’t undo.
Why I think you should read it:
From
the very first moment when I’m falling from the train with Gretl and trying to
defend myself against the cuts and bruises of rolling down the hillside, I was
on a literary journey like no other. Gretl’s fears were my own as I wondered how
she would survive hiding from the German search dogs or even find shelter in a
country who despised her Jewish heritage?
Ms.
Joubert is a magical storyteller who weaves gripping suspense with heart
wrenching emotion into a story based on true events about a little orphan fighting
to survive the effects of the Nazi war effort. Little Gretl can’t even relax
her guard when she finds herself adopted by Protestant parents because one slip
of her tongue could reveal her past and seal her doom. I was on the edge of my seat until the very
last page. An absolute MUST read!
Like-o-meter Rating scale **: 5 out of
5…grab it!
**
5 out of 5...grab it!
4 out of 5...think about it.
3 out of 5...take it or leave it.
2 out of 5...maybe not for you.
1 out of 5...forget about it!
Blurb: Addie comes from a long line
of readers or "story catchers" as her family likes to call
themselves. Every time Addie tries to catch a story on her own the wiggly words
play tricks on her. She tries different ways to make those words sit still but
it will take a little faith for Addie to become the next STORY CATCHER.
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