It all starts with a young Jewish girl named Eva Schloss. She was a timid girl who loved to draw and enjoyed having the company of her large family. Eva grew up in a normal family, with normal friends, and in the normal city of Vienna. Her life was going great, until 1940 when the Nazis invaded Austria. Everything she knew was about to change in an instant. Eva and her brother, Heinz, and her parents had to flee to Belgium immediately. Soon after, they fled to Amsterdam where they could receive help from the Dutch Resistance. They spent the next two years in hiding, but the family was separated to help conceal themselves so they would not stand out. Eva and her mother, Elfriede Geiringer, stayed in one house. Heinz and her father, Erich Geiringer, stayed in another house. Sadly, after the two years in Amsterdam, a neighbor finally betrayed the family and sold them out to the Nazis. Eva and her family were deported to Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland, being separated once again from her brother and father. Eva and her mother would work long days and suffer through the camp, not even knowing what was happening to the rest of their family. Eva would have to keep a strong and positive attitude if she wanted to survive.
I personally love books based on past wars, specifically World War II and the Holocaust, so this book definitely caught my attention. The Promise is intriguing and written perfectly for a child and teen audience. What I like the most about this book is it’s perspective. It is written in first-person, focusing on the journey of Eva Schloss through World War II. I love how easy it is the follow along with her life, considering she is close to my age. The author herself does a great job using detail to pull the reader’s attention. This genre is something I typically read whenever I can. I just love learning about the historic moments of our world’s past, and The Promise teaches me exactly that. If I had to compare The Promise to any other book I have read, it would have to be with Prisoner B-3087 by Alan Gratz. It is another first person perspective of a young Jewish boy being taken away from his family and forced into ten different concentration camps. The young boy, Yanek, never knew the fates of his other family members and he was always on his own. Just like Eva, Yanek had to look ahead to the future as his only ray of hope.
The Promise is built on two main ideas that join to create the perfect tone and mood. First, there is suffering that Eva and her family had to endure. However, their greatest cause of suffering was not to their physical state but to their emotional state. Eva and her family were betrayed by their close neighbors, who really turned out to be spies. The day they were betrayed was on Eva’s birthday, and she definitely was not having the special day she imagined. Eva explains in her own words, “Although the sun had risen on my birthday, it was the darkest day of my life (pg. 93).”Nevertheless, Eva and her family stuck together and leaned on each other through hard times. This concept helps suggest the second big idea of The Promise, the bonds of family. Eva describes, “I realized that my family belonged to a helpless group of people, picked on, discriminated against, bullied, tortured, for one reason only - because we were Jewish (pg. 95).” Through all this, even Eva and her mother being separated from her father and brother, they trusted that goodness and righteousness still existed. Not only did they have their own family of four, they now had every other Jewish human being to depend on and support. As shown, even in the midst of suffering and loss, Eva was able to push through her adversity because of her family. She always believed things would ultimately get better. Eva and her family, as well as her new Jewish camp family, would keep their heads held high and focused on surviving together.