In August in 1939, twin sisters Antonina and Helena Dąbrowska wave goodbye to all the able bodied men who leave to defend Poland against the threat of German invasion and their father is one of them. The next day, the Germans start bombing Warsaw, sitting in basements around the city, with very little food and water, people pray and worry about loved ones fighting.
The German army is unstoppable and a month later the sisters hear a strange sound and it’s stomping of thousands of boots as the German march into Warsaw and they have no idea what's happened to their father.
Antonina is a music student and she's a pianist, she knows Marek Eisenberg a Jewish violinist, they hear rumors about the German's building a wall and creating a ghetto. In October 1940, all Jewish people living in Warsaw have to move into the designated area in the overcrowded ghetto and it's later sealed off. Antonina decides to help and she becomes a member of network of women who risk their lives to shelter Jewish children and move them onto the next safe house.
Helena works as a secretary for a German official and he’s an accountant and tax examiner for his government. Helena decides to join the Polish underground army, as the Soviet’s get closer to Warsaw, they are preparing to fight to free their homeland from the German occupation, they form battalions, gather what weapons they can scavenge, make petrol bombs and wait for the signal.
Both sisters are involved in the Polish resistance, if discovered they would be killed or sent to a concentration camp, so for the first time ever they keep secrets from each other and this drives a wedge between them.
I received a copy of The Warsaw Sisters by Amanda Barratt from Revell Publishing and NetGalley in exchange for an unbiased review. I knew Poland was invaded by the Germans during The Second World War and I had no idea how bad it was and this is a well written and extremely powerful story.
Ms. Barratt’s narrative looks at the war from the two sisters points of view and it highlights the major and tragic events that happened during the German occupation of Poland. Inspired by ordinary people who endured terrible hardship and what took place over five years, the building of the Warsaw ghetto, the Katyn massacre, the Warsaw ghetto uprising, the battle of Warsaw, the terrible repercussions for the innocent civilians at Wola and Ochta. The Germans destroyed over 80% of Warsaw’s buildings, almost the entire city was reduced to rubble and it was a smelly wasteland.
A story about courage, sacrifice, resilience, survival, urban guerilla warfare, everyday Polish men and women taking up arms and it was the largest nonmilitary fight by an European resistance during the Second World War. Five stars from me, this is one of the best historical fiction books I have read, I will never forget what happened in Poland and I highly recommend.