Pam Jenoff
Emma, \u200b\u200ba young bride edraica faith, is suddenly in front of your world upside down. The Nazis invaded Poland and his city, Krakow, is no longer what it was before. Her husband joined the courageous resistance against the occupation and his parents are locked up in the ghetto of the city. Emma is alone and disconsolate, and his life, if it were a person of flesh and blood, would end shortly thereafter. Here, however, spoke the magic of the novel: the young woman is saved, and through support in organizing the resistance gets a new identity and a new life. Here we choose to remain anonymous and thanks his God for being alive, but not she, Emma, \u200b\u200bwho calls herself Anna undercover, tempting fate and begins a hard working and engaging in espionage. Best of Mata Hari and most outrageous of a Bond girl ends up having an affair with a Nazi commander.
Comment: The book is enjoyable because we are now trained to U.S. blockbusters, but only if you lift me shudder a little historical consciousness. On the other hand, it is the obligation of Stories teach us the history of entertainment, a task difficult enough, and so advance the manuals. If you are not demanding philologists, but instead want to spend a few hours to investigate the deeper aspects of human treachery and read this novel. Attention is not for lovers of happy endings!
4 / 5
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