I received this as part of a goodreads giveaway.
The Last Plane is a multi-generational story about family, war, and survival. Although the characters in this story are Austrian, and on the “other side” during WWII, this story could reflect any family. The story is told through two timelines that intertwine and reveal the family saga. Upon the death of his father, a son finds a cache of letters his father wrote to his mother during WWII. Through his fathers letters, the son uncovers the suffering of the war that was never talked about.
As the story unfold through the letters, the son (and the reader) discover how his father came to join the army at the beginn8ng of WWII, the suffering being felt at home, how they ended up on the Eastern front, and finally how the family emigrated to Canada. Never at any point did I feel like I was reading about “the enemy”. Soldiers are soldiers. Governments set policy and generals make decisions, soldiers follow orders. In the end, they all just want to get back to their families and a normal life. Survival. Although only touched on a little bit was the families troubles as immigrants after the war.
I don’t feel like I’m really doing this book justice, but it hooked me from the very first page. Having German heritage, I was able to see my Mom’s hometown in the story-German families, German language, German names, German food, but also very American (or a Canadian in this story’s case). This story shows us that no matter where we are born, we all just want to live a good and happy life. I will admit that in the middle of the book seemed to drag a bit, but this was when they were fighting on the Eastern front, which itself dragged on, so maybe that was the author’s intent.
Highly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in WWII. Definitely not a romanticized account of the war at all. Wonderful debut novel, thank you for the privilege of reading it.