Fireweed is a novel taking place in WWII Germany. At first, I thought it might ring similar to Dean Hughes’ Children of the Promise series, which highlights a missionary who served in Germany and then, as a soldier, had to fight the very people he had grown to love. But this novel takes a different perspective: that of Lisel Spann, a carefree, faithful, strong German teen.
This was a great book to begin to understand yet another new perspective of this era of modern history. It seems that most books written about “inside Germany” during the second World War are about concentration camps, either hiding from them or experiencing them. While I don’t want to downplay the atrocities of the concentration camps, this point of view is equally valuable — it deals with the atrocities everyday German citizens had to endure.
We learn about war in school as though it were a game with no real consequences — so much of it is about who won what battles. I knew that after the war, there was a lot of “clean-up” to be done — though I hadn’t really thought about why (’cause on video games, things just reset themselves). And I hadn’t understood why the Americans would be the ones to help clean up when we had won — what kind of prize is that? If I had beat my brother in a game of one-on-one (hey, it’s my blog and I can dream if I want to), seems like a fair deal would be that he would do the dishes afterwards. The thing is, though, that war is never fair (or it’s “all fair,” as the cliche goes), and you have to go with what makes sense on a personal, human level.
Obviously, as an American, I had never imagined the German perspective — how it frustrating it would be to live off of ration points that were continually devalued; how terrified I would be of the nightly air raids; how worn and ragged I would feel living in a city that had been reduced to rubble, its citizens hungry, tired, displaced, and desperate. For German citizens like Lisel, it seem that everyone is the enemy: the German government denies her even the most basic freedoms, a group of Poles who refuse Lisel shelter as British forces bomb Berlin, the Russians who brutally kill Germans as they march to seige the capital city, and even the American soldiers who detain the “dirty Krauts” in subhuman conditions.
Still, when it seems everyone is against her, Lisel is strengthened by family and faith. The blessings of the gospel permeated the story, endearing the strong and stalwart characters to the reader.
Terry Montague notes in her foreward to the book that she wanted to make the experiences told in the novel as real as possible, so she reduced her diet to only a few hundred calories per day. The insights into the minds of the character were unexpected but real — I get cranky when dinner is late, so I can only imagine what the trial of hunger might be like.
The characters in this book were wonderful, with many moods and layers. The story is plenty bittersweet but permeated with hope. The novel is one of the best I’ve read in awhile.