Fiction
Berkley
March 19, 2019
Advanced reading copy
400
Publisher via NetGalley
From the acclaimed author of Secrets of a Charmed Life and As Bright as Heaven comes a novel about a German American teenager whose life changes forever when her immigrant family is sent to an internment camp during World War II. Elise Sontag is a typical Iowa fourteen-year-old in 1943--aware of the war but distanced from its reach. Then her father, a legal U.S. resident for nearly two decades, is suddenly arrested on suspicion of being a Nazi sympathizer. The family is sent to an internment camp in Texas, where, behind the armed guards and barbed wire, Elise feels stripped of everything beloved and familiar, including her own identity. The only thing that makes the camp bearable is meeting fellow internee Mariko Inoue, a Japanese-American teen from Los Angeles, whose friendship empowers Elise to believe the life she knew before the war will again be hers. Together in the desert wilderness, Elise and Mariko hold tight the dream of being young American women with a future beyond the fences. But when the Sontag family is exchanged for American prisoners behind enemy lines in Germany, Elise will face head-on the person the war desires to make of her. In that devastating crucible she must discover if she has the will to rise above prejudice and hatred and re-claim her own destiny, or disappear into the image others have cast upon her. The Last Year of the War tells a little-known story of World War II with great resonance for our own times and challenges the very notion of who we are when who we've always been is called into question.
Leave it to Susan Meissner to take an aspect of WWII that little is known about, and bring it to the forefront in this wonderful novel! If you have read many stories from this time period, you are probably aware of the displacement of the US Japanese residents after the attack on Pearl Harbor. But were you aware that there were German Americans also sent to internment camps by virtue of their heritage? Elise's parents had been in this country for decades, yet various people conspire to have her father arrested as a threat to war security. Soon the entire family is shipped off to a barbed wire enclosed "camp" to spend their days, presumably until the war ends. It is within the camp that Elise meets a Japanese American girl and they develop a strong bond of friendship. While the majority of the book centers on the last year of the war, there is a modern day component as Elise tries to find out what happened to her best friend, as ultimately they both get sent from the camp. I loved the characters in this book, even the minor ones like Elise's mother, who never forgives herself for the role she plays in them being sent to the camp. This is a novel of unjust behavior, of perseverance, and of forgiveness, but mostly it is a novel of friendship helping you through bad times.
Ms. Meissner is an auto-buy author for me, I have thoroughly enjoyed all her books. I always learn something from history that I rarely knew about before reading. I would highly recommend this title, as well as any of her back titles.
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