Read this if you
📌Want to learn more about Ukrainian history in the 1930's-40's
📌Want to learn about forced labor camps during WWII
📌 how refugees reunited after the war and life in the DP camps
📌Attitudes that both the Soviets and the Nazis held about the Ukrainian people.
📌The involvement of partisan and resistance groups in this region of the war
📌Allied bombings of Dresden Germany in 1945
📌The geography of the region that was disputed by Ukraine, Soviets, and the Polish people.
📌The involvement of the Polish Arabian stable
📌Stories where characters face many trials.
📌Multiple characters tell the story(all in 3rd person perspective)
Even when the odds are stacked against us, we fight for our land, for our families, for our way of life, because if we don’t, we will always lose.
Erin Litteken is fast becoming a favorite author and for the second time, I am crowning her book with a five star. This is a novel about family, wartime, resistance, the struggle to survive and the spirit of the people of Ukraine.
Ukrainians had always had to fight for the right to exist—against Russians, Poles, Germans, the list went on. Resistance flowed through Ukrainians’ veins like blood
The story is told through the eyes of Vika,Liliya, and Hayla. At the beginning, Hayla's story runs parallel but it is later in the novel when all three women's lives collide. It is a very realistic novel with lots of descriptive writing. Sometimes it was hard to read such heartbreaking stories. But I found myself unable to stop reading. The book does end on a hopeful note as several characters begin life after the war.
The author's personal family history inspired this novel. New readers will find a helpful glossary of terms at the back of the book as well as a historical note, author's note, bookclub questions and a suggested reading list.
At its height, the forced labor program employed over 7.6 million workers, roughly 2.2 million of which were Ukrainians. Near the end of the war, Ostarbeiters were marched to other camps and factories, forced to dig trenches, and sometimes killed in mass executions when camps and factories closed, as Liliya experienced.
As the war ended, Ukraine was left in shambles. Roughly 7 million Ukrainians had died, and 2.2 million had been shipped off as forced laborers. Of the 36 million remaining Ukrainians, 10 million were homeless. Nearly 29,000 villages and cities, including the village where my great-grandfather was born, were decimated.
If you enjoyed this novel, I highly recommend the author's The Memory Keeper of Kyviv
Goodreads review published 26/08/23