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« Je le crierai à la face du monde ! »
Rose Justice est une jeune pilote de liaison américaine,
qui opère sur le territoire britannique pendant l’été 1944.
Capturée par la Luftwaffe, et après avoir refusée de travailler dans une usine construisant des bombes, elle est finalement envoyée dans le camp de Ravensbrück.
Emprisonnée avec une française, coupable d’avoir épousée un juif, des jeunes-femmes polonaises victimes d’atroces expérimentations nazies et des prisonnières de guerre de l’Armée Rouge, elle va alors se trouver confrontée aux pires atrocités de la guerre.
Elle va aussi découvrir que sa survie et plus encore son humanité dépendent de la puissance des liens qu’elle va forger avec des femmes qu’elle n’aurait normalement jamais du rencontrer...
391 pages, Kindle Edition
First published June 1, 2013
"Hope is the most treacherous thing in the world. It lifts you and lets you plummet."It's about maintaining hope while surviving a reality that is harsher than most people can imagine. It's about surviving a place that was designed to systematically dehumanize and purge its prisoners. For Rose, her poems help keep her from becoming a schmootzich, someone whose desperation has turned her into a savage. Something else that helps Rose are her friendships with the other prisoners. It wouldn't be an Elizabeth Wein story without powerful relationships. The friendships in Rose though are different because they are born of circumstance -- horrible circumstance. It is unlikely that the prisoners would have even encountered each other in the outside world, and yet they now depend upon one another to make it through another day. Sometimes, though, the most powerful bonds are the ones forged in fire. It's what keeps you standing when hope plummets. It's a tiny strip of Cherry Soda nail polish that stubbornly clings to your toes even when your head has been shaved and your clothes stripped off.
Hope is treacherous, but how can you live without it?



