OTHER PRESS
You might also enjoy these titles from our list:
THE GLASS ROOM by Simon Mawer
A FINALIST FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE
A stunning portrait of a family trying to impose order and beauty on a world on the brink of chaos at the outbreak of World War II
“Achieves what all great novels must: the creation of an utterly absorbing world the reader can scarcely bear to leave. Exciting, profoundly affecting, and altogether wonderful.” —
Daily Mail
THE COST OF COURAGE by Charles Kaiser
The true story of the three youngest children of a bourgeois Catholic family who worked together in the French Resistance
“A thorough and quite accessible history of Europe’s six-year murderous paroxysm …
The Cost of Courage
documents, through the life of an extraordinary family, one of the twentieth century’s most fascinating events — the German occupation of the City of Light.” —
Wall Street Journal
CROSSING THE BORDERS OF TIME by Leslie Maitland
A dramatic true story of World War II, exile, and love lost — then reclaimed
“
Schindler’s List
meets
Casablanca
in this tale of a daughter’s epic search for her mother’s prewar beau — fifty years later.” —
Good Housekeeping
A BRIEF STOP ON THE ROAD FROM AUSCHWITZ by Göran Rosenberg
WINNER OF THE AUGUST PRIZE
A shattering memoir about a father’s attempt to survive the aftermath of Auschwitz
“A towering and wondrous work about memory and experience, exquisitely crafted, humane, generous, devastating, yet somehow also hopeful.”
— Financial Times
THE IMPOSSIBLE EXILE: STEFAN ZWEIG AT THE END OF THE WORLD by George Prochnik
An original study of exile, told through the biography of Austrian writer Stefan Zweig
“Subtle, prodigiously researched, and enduringly human throughout,
The Impossible Exile
is a portrait of a man and of his endless flight.” —
The Economist
TRAPEZE by Simon Mawer
A propulsive novel of World War II espionage that introduces Marian Sutro, heroine of
Tightrope
“The book is full of the fascinating minutiae of espionage — aircraft drops, code-cracking, double agents, scrambled radio messages. There’s a romance, too … Mawer exhibits a great feeling for suspense, and produces memorable episodes in dark alleyways, deserted cafes, and shadowy corners of Père Lachaise.” —
New Yorker
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