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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

world war 2 fiction

A birthday and some book recommendations

November 21, 2015

Today is my grandpa’s 90th birthday.

One of the downsides of living so far from family is all the missed celebrations. I’m a big fan of cake and ice cream and being with my family, so birthdays are always a good reason to get together. (Confession: I’m also terrible about getting cards in the mail for people’s birthdays. I’m really good at buying cards and then forgetting to send them. Or maybe I’m just a year ahead of schedule. Who knows?!)

We’ve learned to make phone calls on birthdays and schedule Skype calls and resort to e-mail and Facebook (and the occasional blog post because words can be a gift.)

I could write a thousand words or more about my grandpa. He’s 90, and I’ve known him for 37 years. That’s a chunk of time I don’t take for granted, although it was only 15 years ago that I really learned about him. On his 75th birthday, my mom and I made him a scrapbook. We were in a scrapbooking phase then. And I saw pictures of my grandfather performing gymnastic feats in college, and he told us story after story about his service in Japan during World War 2.

grandpa ww2

In recent years, World War 2 has been a popular subject. Or maybe I’m just more aware of the stories. I read Unbroken earlier this year and was captivated by the true story of Louis Zamperini. I’ve yet to read more true-life stories from the era, but I’ve read a good deal of fiction books set in this time period.

If you’re interested in that era, in stories based on that generation of people and circumstances, allow me to offer some of the best books I’ve read in that genre. (And please add your own!)

Grandpa’s stories are still some of my favorites. And I’m thrilled that he has a display at a local World War 2 museum near my hometown.

Happy birthday, Grandpa!

And here’s my list (in no particular order):

The Girl from the Train by Irma Joubert. This one begins during World War 2, although most of it takes place in the decade afterward. Still, I appreciate seeing the after-effects of the war.

Maggie Bright by Tracy Groot tells the story of the evacuation of Dunkirk and how civilian ships rose to the occasion and rescued the British army. It is a work of fiction based on a historical event that I knew nothing about. And Tracy Groot is one of my favorite writers. Another excellent World War 2 novel by Groot is Flame of Resistance. maggie bright

Promise to Cherish. What about the Amish during World War 2? It’s a question I never considered until I started reading this series by Elizabeth Byler Younts. This book is the second in the series, but they stand alone and it was by far my favorite of the three. I rarely recommend Amish fiction, but anything by Younts is worth reading.

Remember the Lilies by Liz Tolsma. Tolsma also has a three-book series set during World War 2. This one is different because it is set in the Philippines at an internment camp. Many of the books I’ve read set during World War 2 are also set in Europe. I enjoyed the different setting.

SecretsOfACharmedLifeCOVERSecrets of a Charmed Life by Susan Meissner. Here’s another author whose historical stories are among my favorites. This follows a contemporary storyline along with one set in 1940s London.

The Butterfly and the Violin by Kristy Cambron.  This one, also, follows a dual timeline, and shows the amazing resilience of art and beauty to withstand the worst of circumstances.

Grand Central: Original Stories of Postwar Love and Reunion.  This book of short stories is a slice of life as paths cross in Grand Central Station. I enjoyed some of the stories more than others, but the connectedness of them kept me reading. I enjoy being exposed to authors I haven’t previously read, and a book of short stories is a good way to do that.

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. A blind girl in occupied Paris and a German boy who becomes one of the Nazi’s best resistance trackers. The two storylines seem hardly to connect until you keep reading. It’s a bleak but beautiful story, one that leaves you feeling both a bit depressed and hopeful.

If I think of others, I’ll add them. What are your recommendations?

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: birthdays, book lists, grandfathers, world war 2 fiction

A surprising novel from start to finish: Review of The Girl from the Train by Irma Joubert

November 4, 2015

Sometimes I think if I’ve read one World War 2 novel, I’ve read them all. (And I’ve read a lot of World War 2 fiction. I should make a list for you, if that’s a genre you enjoy.)

And sometimes I read a World War 2 novel that surprises me. And while The Girl from the Train by Irma Joubert (not to be confused with the wildly popular mainstream novel The Girl on the Train) starts during World War 2, it reaches years beyond to illustrate the effects of war on a particular girl.

girl from the trainI didn’t know this book or author existed before the book arrived in my mailbox. (I received a free copy of the book from the publisher in exchange for my review.) But this is one of those times that I’m glad to receive a book that wasn’t on my radar. It’s worth taking note of.

The author presents a World War 2 story unlike any I’ve ever read. (And this book has been translated into English and is an international bestseller before it has released in the States.) She takes us on a journey with a young German girl with Jewish blood who escapes a train bound for the concentration camps in Poland. She is found by a Polish resistance member who takes her to his family’s farm to be cared for.

Thus begins the intertwined lives of Gretl and Jakob and the journey that spans almost 15 years and two continents. Gretl is eventually adopted by a family in South Africa where she lives with her secrets as she grows into a woman. Jakob’s opposition to his country’s Communist rule forces him to flee. Through the years they cling to the memory of each other. Until the improbable happens.

That’s all I’ll say so I don’t ruin the surprise.

From the setting to the storyline to the writing, I enjoyed this book as a whole.

You can look for this book at Target this month, and I don’t think you’ll be sorry for letting this story into your life.

GFT quote

Filed Under: books, Fiction, The Weekly Read Tagged With: inspirational fiction, international fiction, irma joubert, new book releases, target book club, thomas nelson, world war 2 fiction

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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