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The daughter's tale : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

The daughter's tale : a novel / Armando Lucas Correa ; translated by Nick Caistor.

Correa, Armando Lucas, 1959- (author.). Caistor, Nick, (translator.).

Summary:

Berlin, 1939: recent widow Amanda Sternberg is fleeing Nazi Germany with her two young daughters, heading towards unoccupied France. She arrives in Haute-Vienne with only one of her girls. Their freedom is short-lived and soon they are taken to a labour camp. New York City, 2015: Elise Duval, eighty years old, receives a phone call from a woman bearing messages - letters written to Elise from her mother, unravelling more than seven decades of secrets.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781501187933,9781501187940
  • Physical Description: 303 pages ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First Atria Books hardcover edition.
  • Publisher: New York ; Atria Books, 2019.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"Spanish edition published in 2019 by Atria Español as La hija olvidada."--Title page verso.
Subject: Mothers and daughters > Fiction.
Letters > Fiction.
World War, 1939-1945 > Fiction.
Genre: Historical fiction.

Available copies

  • 14 of 14 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 0 of 0 copies available at Grand Forks and District Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 14 total copies.
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  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2019 April #1
    Amanda Sternberg has a comfortable life in Berlin with her cardiologist husband, Julius, and their two little daughters, Viera and Lina, until the Nazis come into power. Julius is arrested, but he has already set in motion a plan to keep his family safe. Passage has been secured onboard a ship bound for Cuba, but only for two, so arrangements have been made for Amanda to go to France. On an impulse, she sends Viera off to Cuba alone and takes Lina with her to a tiny village in Haute-Vienne, where they will be sheltered by a Catholic family. When the Nazis penetrate even that remote area, Amanda and Lina are rounded up and sent to a provisional internment camp. Just as Julius did years before, Amanda concocts her own plan to get Lina to safety. Even in retreat, however, the Nazis remain a threat, and Lina must find a way to survive on her own. As he did in The German Girl (2016), but focusing this time on occupied France, Correa offers a gripping and richly detailed account of lives torn apart by war. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2019 May
    My mother before me

    Four compelling stories of mothers and daughters center on secrets revealed and secrets kept, with powerful consequences that reverberate through the years.


    A wealth of history turns Wunderland into a novel that's both beautiful and devastating. Author Jennifer Cody Epstein (The Painter From Shanghai ) taps into the 1930s prewar era, laying out an unsparing narrative that details tragic events and horrifying legacies.

    Renate and Ilse, Jew and Gentile, are best friends in pre-World War II Germany, but they're driven apart in the terrible buildup to war when Ilse joins Bund Deutscher Mädel, the female division of the Hitler Youth movement. Many years later, in 1989 New York City, Ilse's estranged daughter, Ava Fischer, receives her mother's ashes and a trove of letters, addressed to Renate but never sent, that reveal her mother's terrible secrets. In turn, Ava resists sharing Ilse's history with her own daughter, Sophie, and Ava realizes that she "has kept Sophie from her own story." 

    The narrative unfolds from several characters' perspectives, making plain "the things we lie about to make our crimes bearable," while also opening a new door that may lead to redemption and joy for future generations.

    The Daughter's Tale is a detailed, immersive chronicle of World War II's tragedy, the power of love and the lengths to which a mother will go to save her children when there are no choices left. With his second novel, Armando Lucas Correa (The German Girl ) depicts the meager options available to Jewish people caught in the vise of war, highlighting two real historical events: the ill-fated voyage of the liner St. Louis, in which Jews were not allowed to debark at their destination of Havana, Cuba; and the 1944 SS massacre of French villagers in the town of Oradour-sur-Glane, where only a few survived.

    In the novel, a Jewish woman named Amanda Sternberg flees Germany in 1939 with her two daughters, Lina and Viera, but she makes a fateful decision that separates the children and forever alters their lives. Viera is sent to Cuba, but Correa's novel follows the youngest daughter, Lina, as she escapes wartime imprisonment to begin a different life in France, where her relative freedom is short-lived. Correa starkly portrays the many horrors that were visited on an innocent citizenry.

    In her new novel, Feast Your Eyes, Myla Goldberg, author of the 2001 bestseller Bee Season, has again turned her talent for detail into a powerful story about gifted yet flawed characters who can't escape tragic missteps.

    Lillian Preston is a singularly talented photographer whose early work runs afoul of obscenity laws in the 1950s. Photographs of her seminaked 6-year-old daughter, Samantha, lead to trial, tragedy and a rift between mother and daughter that never quite heals. The book is structured like an exhibition catalog that Samantha has organized for a retrospective of her mother's work. Through the diaries and letters of Lillian's loved ones, Samantha uncovers Lillian's gifts, her struggles and intense ambition, tempered by sorrow and love for her daughter. 

    Like a photograph that captures the inner light of its subject, Feast Your Eyes catches such moments on the page, illuminating the power of both beauty and heartbreak. Goldberg unsparingly reveals a driven artist whose propulsive talent is also her Achilles' heel.

    The Unlikely Adventures of the Shergill Sisters, the fourth novel from Balli Kaur Jaswal (Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows), is an absolute delight. It interweaves multiple family stories within the colorful panorama of a journey to India, resulting in a novel that is sad, joyful and exciting all at the same time.

    Jaswal's narrative entwines the stories of three adult sisters whose disparate lives are catapulted on a new and completely different trajectory when their mother makes a request. With her death only hours away, India-born Sita Kaur Shergill, who raised her children in England, says she wants her daughters to undertake a pilgrimage to India—one she was unable to take—and provides detailed instructions for the trip that are daunting, life-changing and often hilarious.

    The Shergill sisters—Rajni, Jezmeen and Shirina—live very separate lives, each with its own secrets. The author enfolds readers in deceptively simple stories that reveal the hidden depth, humor and pathos of each sister's life, as little by little they learn and accept each other's stories. The teeming, textured setting of India is captured through the author's evocative scenes, as the sisters navigate on-the-ground travel as well as their own inner terrain. 

    Copyright 2019 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2019 March #1
    A Holocaust chronicle touching on survivor's guilt and the force of family ties. In his second novel, Correa (The German Girl, 2016) tells the story of Lina Sternberg, a Jewish girl born in Berlin in 1935 to a heart doctor and his spirited wife, Amanda, owner of a bookshop destroyed by the Nazis. Lina endures terrible suffering and loss during the war but eventually settles in America and starts a new life. She suppresses the painful memories of her early days and almost manages to shed her true identity. The first part of the book, spanning the years 1933 to 1942, focuses on Amanda and her frantic efforts to save Lina and her older sister, Viera, from the Nazi horrors. Viera is shipped off to Cuba, where Amanda's brother lives; Lina and her mother hide out in a French village under the protection of a Christian woman named Claire, but they wind up in a horrific French internment camp. Amanda, however, engineers a daring escape for her daughter, who is reunited with Claire an d her daughter, Danielle. Though grim, this part of the narrative is gripping and stirring. The second part is also eventful, but it meanders and lacks focus. Plus, the young Lina (now called Elise), unlike her mother, is not a strong enough character to anchor the action. There is vivid writing, especially in the first part, and some memorable images—for instance, Amanda's talismanic botanical album, filled with hand-painted pictures of plants and flowers. As in The German Girl, the real-life 1939 voyage of the ocean liner St. Louis from Hamburg to Havana figures in the plot; here, the 1944 S.S. massacre of villagers in the tiny French town of Oradour-sur-Glane in the Limoges region also plays a role. Though it's sometimes involving and insightful, Correa's novel is ultimately too diffuse to have the intended impact. Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2019 March #2

    Impossible choices faced by loving parents lie at the heart of this underwhelming tale by Correa (The German Girl). The story opens in New York City in 2015, when the elderly Elise Duval receives a phone call from a strange woman who had recently been in Cuba and found some letters that belong to Elise. The narrative then jumps back to Berlin, starting in 1933 and continuing through 1947 in France. After Julius Sternberg, a Jewish doctor, dies in a prison camp, his wife Amanda carries out his wishes that the rest of the family leave Germany. The plan is for their two daughters, four-year-old Lina and five-year-old Viera, to live in Cuba with an uncle. Unable to secure the necessary travel documents to accompany them, Amanda will go to an old friend, Claire Duval, in France until it's safe to bring the girls back. At the last minute, Amanda decides Lina is too young to go and sends Viera alone. Amanda and Lina's new life in Haute-Vienne with Claire and her daughter, Danielle, turns dangerous when WWII erupts and the Germans arrive in France. Lina and Danielle hide out in an abbey, but in 1944, the Germans come looking for weapons and one of their missing soldiers. While Correa convincingly evokes the perils of occupied France, his characters rarely move beyond being one-dimensional, and the hasty conclusion about how the war ended for Viera and Lina is unsatisfying. Readers interested in WWII fiction have plenty of better options elsewhere. (May)

    Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

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