A lofty undertaking, author Diane Armstrong meticulously details the journey of more than 500 passengers who traveled aboard the less-than luxurious ship – the Derma – in August 1948 from the port of Marseilles to Australia and New Zealand. Immediately following World War II, the ship consisted of those who had been persecuted in Germany and Eastern Europe, who had been in death camps and labor camps, and those who had both welcomed and been hunted by the Nazis. The author was nine years old at the time and traveled on the Derna with her family. Making the harrowing journey in tight quarters with a diverse set of passengers – the atmosphere aboard the ship was filled with anxiety, tension and challenges – but relief as well, as many passengers yearned for a new beginning. Decades later, Armstrong tracks down more than 100 passengers and pieces together their lives since they landed in Australia and New Zealand. She reveals the prejudices of the New World population as they eyed the migrants suspiciously, the hardworking approach of the newly landed passengers and their longing and homesickness for their native lands by some, while adjusting to the New World. Understandably, this was a very personal endeavor for the author and she has painstakingly recorded the lives of those she was able to contact and interview. What I found interesting was that while she detailed out the lives of others, she was rather reticent about herself personally and I was waiting for her story to unfold, but not so. A tome at 624 pages (I listened to the book via CD), it’s a tribute to the passengers who left all they knew – the good and the bad – to sail into the great unknown for a better life for themselves and their children. How similar is that to what many families in war-torn countries are doing today?