Synopsis:
In pre-war Prague, the dreams of two young lovers are
shattered when they are separated by the Nazi invasion. Then, decades later,
thousands of miles away in New York, there's an inescapable glance of
recognition between two strangers. Providence is giving Lenka and Josef one
more chance. From the glamorous ease of life in Prague before the Occupation,
to the horrors of Nazi Europe, The Lost Wife explores the power of first
love, the resilience of the human spirit--and the strength of memory.
About the author:
Alyson Richman is the author of The Mask Carver's Son,
Swedish Tango, The Last Van Gogh, and The Lost Wife. She loves to travel, cook,
ride her yellow bicycle, and do ballet. She currently lives in New York with
her husband and two children.
My review:
I want to start by telling you a story. I know this may seem
an odd way to open a book review, but there’s reason for it.
My seventh grade language arts teacher was horrified
to learn that our school district’s history curriculum would barely touch on
the Holocaust. She felt the only way to prevent such atrocities from happening
again was to educate the younger generations. We read Elie Wiesel’s Night in class and learned to spell gestapo and crematorium. We watched unflinching
documentaries and movies about concentration camps. My amazing teacher also found several Holocaust survivors and spent
at least a month’s worth of weekends shuttling groups of her students all over Maine
so we could interview them. The woman I met was an Auschwitz survivor named
Marta, a towering workhorse of a woman with a kind, homely face. What struck me
most was that even as she described beatings, rapes, starvation, and constant
fear of execution, she prefaced everything by saying how lucky she was. She was
lucky to be ugly. Pretty girls were sent to the front to “service” the S.S.
soldiers and were shot if impregnated. (Her sister met this fate.) She was
lucky to be big because she was strong and could do heavy labor. (Her frail mother
was gassed). The lack of emotion as she spoke left a lasting impression on me.
Since then I’ve seen every WWII movie and read every book on
the Holocaust that I can find. I learned about The Lost Wife from my friend,
historical novelist Stephanie Cowell, who has never led me wrong in her book recommendations.
At the end of the prologue my jaw dropped and I knew there was no way I could put
the book down until I learned what had happened to Lenka and Josef. By thirty
pages in, I knew it would be on my 2012 Best Reads list. I devoured this novel
during every stolen moment alone, which took some creativity with two
energetic kids home for Christmas break. The love story made me ache. The atrocities of Terezin and Auschwitz were
described in an understated and horrifically beautiful way. I could hear Marta’s
voice behind Lenka’s, and it was like I discovered hell right along with them.
If you are drawn to WWII era books, The Lost Wife is a must-read. If you are a sucker for unconventional romances, The Lost Wife is a must-read. If you want a book with characters who will haunt your dreams and make you Google “Terezin” at 3 AM…head to the nearest bookstore or download this book right away.
Have you read The Lost Wife? I’d love to hear your thoughts!
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