It takes a certain, truly despicable, type of person to write a romance between a Jew and a Nazi. Kate Breslin is such a person; she wrote the book For Such A Time. I, unfortunately, only read the first part of the back cover, the part about "Aryan-looking Jew ends up secretary to Nazi and is forced to stand by as her own people are sent to Auschwitz." I thought, that sounds interesting and checked it out. Oh, boy, I sure should have read that middle part. I did not, going into this, know that it was Christian book (what moron's like, oh yeah, story of Esther? a story about Jews? let's rewrite it but insert ~Christianity~).
The book is in third-person, narrated by Stella Muller. Even though her actual name is Hadassah Benjamin. Anyway, she has fake papers that say she's not Jewish, but she gets in a fight with a Gestapo man who gets a wee bit intimate with her at a train station, and gets herself labeled "Jew" and packed off to Dachau.
Where she is miraculously saved by the Nazi Colonel Aric, who firmly believes she's an Aryan that the idiotic Gestapo mistook for a Jew. So, because she's pretty and he has a crush, he saves her from the firing squad and carts her off to the concentration camp Theresienstadt to be his secretary. How romantic. Oh, you don't think so? Well Kate Breslin does!
Aric is portrayed as Misunderstood Man. You know how when women make posts about men treating them shitty and some asshole comes along and says "not all men"? Well, this book is all about Not All Nazis.
In classic Stockholm Syndrome style, Stella has lines like "[…]and though he had the strength to crush her, he’d shown her only gentleness and consideration…” If by 'gentleness and consideration' you mean treating her like a goddamn human being (or, rather, like a beautiful Aryan lady). A lack of cruelty is not the same thing as kindness.
So, you might wonder, what "good things" as Aric done? Well, 1) one of the prisoners (a 10 year old) tried to steal some potatoes and so one of the SS guys lopped one of the kid's ears. Aric decided to make the kid his houseboy. 2) he gives table scraps to the Jews he forces to get his firewood. 3) he...saved Stella? Yeah that's, that's about it. Wow, what a hero. How did someone so noble end up a Nazi?
No, seriously. How did someone with even his pathetic level of decency get the position of SS colonel at Theresienstadt?? Himmler would never let that shit happen. The SS is the creme of the crop. It's the elite. They're the most rabid Nazi zealots of the lot. They have to prove their 'pure' Aryan ancestry going back like 100 years. They fully and completely believe in the Nazi ideology. And those who manage to get into the SS who /don't/ fully believe, or come to not fully believe? They get relieved of their position and treated like traitor's to the Reich. If Aric had even a sliver of humanity within him, he would not be in the SS.
Plus, there's Marta. Marta is Christian. She was Stella's best friend back before Stella got sent to Dachau. Marta, despite otherwise sounding like a decent person, apparently constantly tried to get Stella to convert to Christianity. And now, in the Colonel's house at Theresienstadt, there's a Bible in Stella's bedside table. The way the writing is leaning, it makes me very nervous that the author's going to have Stella convert.
Then there's her vague-at-best understanding of Judaism. She described challah as the bread God gave the Jews during the 40 years in the desert, when, actually, he gave them manna. Then there's that kid, the houseboy Aric saved, who, upon hearing one of Stella's friends (possibly child or younger sister), died in Dachau, says "Then she's in heaven." Um, no, not really. No. Heaven and Hell are Christian concepts. In case you think he's just saying it because he thinks Stella is Christian, he goes on to describe how /his mom/ described heaven.
I don't even know what to make of this shitshow. The implication seems to be that 'hey guys, the Nazis weren't actually that bad' which then, of course, implies the Holocaust was somehow justified, because you can't argue the people who committed it weren't that bad without taking the horror out of the act itself. Or possibly the implication is that Jews who don't "look Jewish" aren't Jews??? I don't know, but it's clearly saying that Aryan-looking Stella and her Nazi love interest are good.
This isn't Schindler's List, okay. This isn't, 'Nazi party member starts to realize Jews are people too and goes out to try and save as many as he can, risking his own skin in the process.' This book isn't that.
This book is, 'SS member thinks this one Jewish girl is hot as hell and so becomes convinced that she cannot possibly be Jewish (because *ew jews aren't pretty*) but must, in fact, be Aryan. Stockholm syndrome ensues.'
Even the author's characterization of actually evil Nazis is spoiled by her need to erase anti-semitism from being a thing. This one guy, Stella's uncle, (named Mordecai, just in case the *THIS IS AN ESTHER RETELLING* hadn't sunk in), is a prisoner at Theresianstadt. One of the guards, Hermann, catches him staring out towards Aric's house and not working. To stop Hermann from dragging him off to Theresianstadt's "Little House" (aka probably a torture chamber), 'Mordy' gives Hermann the Grand Cross he received for his actions in WW1, which Mordy presumably smuggled in via his butt (since, you know, prisoners are strip-searched). Mordy tells Hermann he found it, and, it being worth a lot, Hermann takes the bribe.
What's weird is Hermann's reaction to Mordy. Hermann's not that stupid, he figures out the Grand Cross must have been awarded to Mordecai. And instead of having the reaction you'd expect from a Nazi SS Death's Head member (aka ew gross that's disgusting how could such a prestigious award be given to this jew scum?), Hermann taunts Mordecai and the narration informs us "Hermann's taunts failed to hide his grudging admiration." As though a Nazi ever once admired a Jew.
I then proceeded to head over to Goodreads, where the "genres" section helpfully informed me that this piece of shit is Christian Historical Fiction and Historical Romance.
The writing's pretty good, but the best writing in the world could not make up for the fact that it's a ROMANCE between a JEW and a NAZI. Notice to everyone: if you think for a second about writing a romance between a Jew and Nazi, DON'T DO IT 'cause if you do you're a horrible, incredibly offensive person who understands nothing.